Skip to main content

Tempe Police release footage of fatal crash from inside self-driving Uber

Tempe Police release footage of fatal crash from inside self-driving Uber

/

The video raises more questions about what happened this past weekend

Share this story

Image: Uber

The Tempe Police Department has released the first footage of this week’s fatal crash involving a self-driving Uber. Two angles of the crash — one facing out at the road, and one facing in at the Uber safety driver — were compiled into a 22-second video that was released on the Tempe Police’s Twitter account Wednesday night. In both angles, the footage stops just before the car strikes and kills pedestrian 49-year-old Elaine Herzberg.

In the camera angle that faces inward, the Uber safety driver can be seen looking down for several seconds in the moments before the crash. The driver, 44-year-old Rafaela Vasquez, reportedly told Tempe Police chief Sylvia Moir that “it was like a flash, the person walked out in front of them,” and that “the first alert to the collision was the sound of the collision.” Vasquez can be seen looking back up at the road just before the car strikes Herzberg.

“The video is disturbing and heartbreaking to watch, and our thoughts continue to be with Elaine’s loved ones,” a spokesperson for Uber said in a statement to The Verge. “Our cars remain grounded, and we’re assisting local, state and federal authorities in any way we can.”

The beginning of what is likely to be much more evidence to come

The video was released in the middle of what is an ongoing investigation by the Tempe Police Department. A representative for the police department said in a press conference on Monday night that footage from the Uber wouldn’t be released until after the investigation had concluded, but the department apparently decided to change course.

“We often release footage of investigations that our department is investigating,” detective Lily Duran said in an email to The Verge. “The information that we provided is all the information that we have available at this time. Uber is aware of the video and has seen it.”

Police had previously said that the Uber did not slow down before it struck Herzberg, something the footage appears to confirm. We also now know that Herzberg was crossing the street from the median to the sidewalk on the right with her bicycle.

Otherwise, the video of the crash amplifies questions that were already being asked about the current state of self-driving tests being performed around the country, and the technology in general. And it sparks new questions as well. For instance, the car is equipped with sensors that should have been able to spot Herzberg in the middle of the street, but it appears that she either wasn’t recognized by the Uber’s autonomous system, or that she was, and something went wrong in the process of applying the brakes.

It’s also unclear why Vasquez’s eyes left the road, but we don’t know what Uber’s policies are for safety drivers in the first place, and whether or not that was some kind of violation of them. What’s more, it’s hard to say with any certainty from these two angles whether Vasquez could have intervened in time to stop the car to begin with.

Perhaps above all that, Moir said yesterday that it was “likely” that Uber was not at fault in the accident. But the video does not seem to support that claim — in fact, on its own it doesn’t seem to be enough evidence to definitively place blame at all.

Many of these questions will be answered when more evidence is uncovered and subsequently released, something that is bound to happen as both the National Transportation Safety Board and the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration are in Tempe conducting their own investigations into the crash. The Tempe Police Department will also eventually turn over its investigation to the Maricopa County Attorney’s office. In the meantime, a debate over the future of self-driving cars begins in earnest, and another human life remains lost.

We’ve embedded the tweet with the crash video below. Even though it stops before the moment of the crash, it is still disturbing and graphic.