KEY POINTS
  • Tesla has filed to appeal a high-profile lawsuit where it was found partly liable for a fatal crash involving Enhanced Autopilot.
  • Elon Musk's automaker is asking for the verdict to be tossed or for a new trial.
  • In early August, a jury said Tesla should pay $242.5 million, a portion of a total $329 million in damages, to compensate the victim's family and an injured survivor.

In this article

Dillon Angulo, 33, looks at a roadside memorial sign reading "Drive Safely In Memory Naibel Benavidez" next to the site of a car crash where a Tesla driver using Autopilot killed her, and left him catastrophically injured in 2019, on Aug. 12, 2025, in Key Largo, Florida.

Tesla has filed a motion to appeal the verdict in a product liability and wrongful death lawsuit that could cost the company $242.5 million if it is not reduced or overturned.

Elon Musk's automaker has asked for the verdict to be tossed or for a new trial in Florida's Southern district court.

In this article