Tesla's Blame Game: Drivers Held Responsible for Defective Parts Despite Tesla's Knowledge

A Reuters investigation reveals that Tesla has been aware of chronic parts failures in its vehicles but has been blaming its customers for the issues instead. The company has been diverting responsibility onto drivers, citing vehicle "abuse" as the cause of failures, even though it knew the parts were inherently flawed. The investigation includes interviews with service technicians, repair documents, and internal communications that expose Tesla's practice of charging customers for out-of-warranty parts that the company knew were defective. The report highlights a series of suspension failures in China that were similar to incidents experienced by Tesla owners in the US, with the company blaming driver abuse instead of acknowledging the inherent faults in the cars.
- Tesla Has Been Blaming Drivers For Faults With Defective Parts: Report Jalopnik
- Tesla blamed drivers for failures of parts it long knew were defective Reuters
- Report: Tesla Unfairly Blamed Drivers for Parts Failures on EVs Car and Driver
- Tesla owner faced $14K repair day after buying: report Business Insider
- Tesla knew some of its parts had high failure rates but reportedly blamed drivers anyway Engadget
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