Tesla Owner Turned On Autopilot, Sat On Passenger Seat As Car Ran. Watch

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
The St
Albans Crown Court recently banned Bhavesh Patel, 39, from driving for 18 monthsLondon:  A man appeared to want
to test the limits of Tesla's autopilot feature, and a British court has made an example out of him.The St
Albans Crown Court recently banned Bhavesh Patel, 39, from driving for 18 months for climbing into the passenger seat of his Model S after
turning on its semiautonomous feature
Tesla instructs customers to keep their hands on the steering wheel while the autopilot is turned on.The police, citing witness accounts,
said Patel's Model S was traveling about 40 mph in heavy traffic last year
According to a video taken by a witness, no one was sitting in the driver's seat, and Patel appeared to have his hands behind his head
Patel was later interviewed by officers at a police station, law enforcement officials said, where he admitted that he knew his actions were
"silly" but the car was capable of something "amazing.He told police he was just the "unlucky one who got caught."Patel pleaded guilty to
dangerous driving, law enforcement officials said Friday.Attempts to contact Patel were unsuccessful.The incident highlights the risks and
disregard for safety precautions of such technology
Patel's use of autopilot underscores how the up-and-coming technology might tempt users to abuse it without fully understanding its
limitations
Researchers and other technology developers say human behavior makes it easy to become overly reliant on autonomous technology
In March, a Tesla owner in California died after his electric SUV crashed into a median while the vehicle was in autopilot mode on Highway
101 near Mountain View
The company and the National Transportation Safety Board have publicly clashed in recent weeks over the disclosure of information related to
the crash as a federal investigation of the collision continues.Tesla referred The Washington Post to prior statements that said the
autopilot feature is only intended for use with a fully attentive driver
Drivers receive an escalating series of audio and visual warnings if the car detects that the driver's hands are not on the steering wheel
If a driver ignores those warnings, the car will disengage the autopilot system for the remainder of the drive."What Patel did was grossly
irresponsible and could have easily ended in tragedy," investigating officer Kirk Caldicutt of the Bedfordshire, Cambridgeshire and
Hertfordshire Road Policing Unit said in a news statement last week
"This case should serve as an example to all drivers who have access to autopilot controls and have thought about attempting something
similar
I want to stress that they are in no way a substitute for a competent motorist in the driving seat who can react appropriately to the road
ahead."On top of the 18-month ban, Patel was ordered to perform 100 hours of community service
He is also slated to carry out 10 days of rehabilitation and was fined 1,800 pounds to offset the costs of the Crown Prosecution Service, or
about $2,500.(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)