Police Say Car in Fatal Crash Was Not Partially Self-Driving

A woman was driving at least 45 mph in an area with a speed limit of 25 to 30 mph, when she ran the red light and was broadsided by another car.

In this Sunday, July 21, 2019 file photo shows the scene after a woman was arrested after running a red light in a rented Tesla in San Francisco and causing a crash that killed a tourist and left his wife critically injured. San Francisco police said Wednesday, July 24, 2019, preliminary information shows a rented Tesla that was speeding when it ran a red light and struck a couple was not on semi-autonomous Autopilot mode.
In this Sunday, July 21, 2019 file photo shows the scene after a woman was arrested after running a red light in a rented Tesla in San Francisco and causing a crash that killed a tourist and left his wife critically injured. San Francisco police said Wednesday, July 24, 2019, preliminary information shows a rented Tesla that was speeding when it ran a red light and struck a couple was not on semi-autonomous Autopilot mode.
Kate Larsen/KGO-TV via AP, File

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — A rented Tesla that was speeding when it ran a red light and killed a man and critically injured his wife was not on semi-autonomous Autopilot mode, police said Wednesday.

Detectives removed a data storage device from the automobile that will be analyzed to help determine the actions that led to the collision, said San Francisco Police Department spokesman Officer Adam Lobsinger.

Investigators are also working with Tesla to obtain further evidence, he said.

The driver, Kelly Cambridge of Vallejo, was arrested on suspicion of vehicular manslaughter and running a red light, police said.

Alex Bastian, a spokesman with the district attorney's office said Wednesday the office hasn't received the case yet from police to make any charging decisions.

It was not immediately known if she has an attorney. Cambridge, 21, was speeding Sunday when she ran a red light in the Tesla, which she had rented through a peer-to-peer car rental service, police said.

Drugs and alcohol did not appear to be a factor, police said. The woman was driving Sunday at least 45 mph (70 kph) in an area with a speed limit of 25 to 30 mph (40 to 50 kph), when she ran the red light and was broadsided by another car, police said

The Tesla struck a car and then couple who were in a crosswalk, killing 39-year-old Benjamin Dean. His wife, Kelly Dean, remained in critical condition Wednesday.

The couple from Clovis in the Central Valley was in San Francisco celebrating their third wedding anniversary, according to Kelly Dean's Facebook page.

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