GM’s Cruise self-driving car unit on Thursday revealed US Department of Justice and Securities and Exchange Commission probes stemming from an October collision in which one of its autonomous vehicles dragged a pedestrian who had been struck by another vehicle.
Cruise reported the government investigations in a blog post in which the company also vowed to reform its culture stemming from a “failure of leadership” around the incident. The blog post did not disclose the status of the victim, who was dragged 20ft by the vehicle, nor the scope of the justice department and SEC probes.
Cruise’s four-page post cited “inadequate and uncoordinated internal processes, mistakes in judgment, an ‘us versus them’ mentality with government officials, and a fundamental misunderstanding of regulatory requirements and expectations”. More than 100 people knew details of the incident prior to Cruise’s meetings with regulators, the report found.
Cruise said a report it commissioned from the law firm Quinn Emanuel found that the evidence did not establish that Cruise leadership or employees “sought to intentionally mislead or hide from regulators the details” of the 2 October incident. The safety review concerned the incident and did not broadly examine corporate culture or protocols.
A separate technical review by engineering firm Exponent found that the Cruise vehicle experienced mapping errors and incorrectly identified hitting the woman as a side-impact collision, the blog post stated. Cruise has updated its software. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration is also investigating the crash.
Since the incident, Cruise has fired nine executives; its CEO and a co-founder resigned; and it cut a quarter of its staff. California suspended the company’s permission to operate autonomous vehicles in the state in October. The company recalled all its cars in November.
In December, California regulators said Cruise could face $1.5m in fines and additional sanctions for not fully disclosing details of the incident, in which a woman was initially struck by a human-driven auto before being dragged by the Cruise vehicle, prompting them to suspend the company’s permit to operate.
In the blog post summarizing a more than 100-page report, Cruise characterized its response to the incident as mistakes made by a relatively new company inexperienced in dealing with regulators, the media and the public.
The company initially provided regulators with video of the incident but no verbal context such as mentioning that the woman was dragged 23ft (7 metres). Instead it let the video “speak for itself”, according to the blog post. In three meetings, internet troubles prevented regulators from fully viewing the video and the report indicates company officials did not seek to fix the issue.
Quinn Emanuel interviewed 88 people and reviewed 200,000 documents, according to the blog post.
Cruise once operated hundreds of self-driving taxis in California, Texas and other locations, hoping to generate meaningful revenue while perfecting the technology for a broader rollout.
Trying to correct what it saw as inaccurate media portrayals of the October incident, Cruise omitted information and provided “incomplete facts” and video to the press and public, according to the blog post. The post did not make clear how those actions fit with the broader assertion that there was no intent to mislead.
Cruise and GM came under heavy criticism after Cruise failed to promptly disclose details of the incident to the California Department of Motor Vehicles. The DMV revoked the company’s permit to operate driverless vehicles on public roads, citing concerns about an inability “to respond in a safe and appropriate manner during incidents involving a pedestrian”.
Cruise has said it plans a return to testing on public streets, but not has not revealed where or when.
GM is spending nearly $2bn a year on Cruise and insists the business represents a “giant growth opportunity”. In June, the GM CEO Mary Barra reiterated a forecast that Cruise could generate $50bn a year in annual revenue by 2030.
Executives will appear before the California public utilities commission on 6 February to answer questions about the report and to help the agency determine an appropriate fine. Cruise had offered $75,000 as a settlement, but the commission is seeking a stiffer penalty.
NHTSA, the CPUC, the California DMV and other regulators were not immediately available for comment on the report.
While Cruise operations are grounded, vehicles from competitor Waymo, a unit of Alphabet, remain a common sight on San Francisco streets; the company has plans to expand to Los Angeles and other markets.