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First self-driven Tesla car crashes in China

Tesla says one of its cars crashed last week in Beijing while in Autopilot mode, and the driver is contending that Tesla's sales staff overplayed the car's self-driving capability.

Tesla said it has reviewed data to confirm the car was in Autopilot mode, a system that takes control of steering and braking in certain conditions.

The company, which is investigating the crash in China's capital, also said it was the driver's responsibility to maintain control of the vehicle. In this case, it said, the driver's hands were not detected on the steering wheel.

The crash, Tesla's first known such incident in China, comes months after a fatal accident in Florida put pressure on regulators to tighten rules on automated driving technology.

Luo Zhen, a 33-year-old programmer at a tech firm, told Reuters that he was driving to work and engaged the Autopilot function as he often does on Beijing's highways.

Luo, who filmed the incident with a dashboard camera, said the car hit a vehicle parked half off the road. The accident sheered off the parked vehicle's side mirror and scraped both cars, but caused no injuries.

"The driver of the Tesla, whose hands were not detected on the steering wheel, did not steer to avoid the parked car and instead scraped against its side," a Tesla spokeswoman said in an emailed response to Reuters.

"As clearly communicated to the driver in the vehicle, autosteer is an assist feature that requires the driver to keep his hands on the steering wheel at all times, to always maintain control and responsibility for the vehicle, and to be prepared to take over at any time."

But Luo blamed the crash on a fault in the autopilot system and said Tesla's sales staff strongly promoted the system as 'self-driving.'

"The impression they give everyone is that this is self-driving, this isn't assisted driving," he said.

Interviews with four other Tesla drivers in Beijing, Shanghai and Guangzhou also indicated that the dealership salesmen's pitch did not match Tesla's more clear-cut statements that the system is not "self-driving" but an advance driver assistance system.

These Tesla owners all said that salespeople described the cars in Chinese as "self-driving" -- a term the company generally avoids using in English -- and took their hands off the wheel while demonstrating it.

"They all described it as being able to drive itself," said Shanghai resident Mao Mao, who bought a Tesla Model S last year.

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