Nevada
Tesla Semi involved in first fatal crash, killing 2 in Nevada
A Tesla Semi was involved in its first known fatal crash, killing two people on U.S. 50 in Nevada on Sunday morning.
The driver of the Class 8 electric truck reportedly fell asleep before rear-ending two passenger vehicles stopped at a red light, according to preliminary statements from investigators.
What happened on US-50 in Dayton
At around 7:20 a.m. on Sunday, June 28, deputies from the Lyon County Sheriff’s Office responded to a major collision at the intersection of U.S. 50 and Traditions Parkway in Dayton, Nevada, east of Carson City.
A semi-truck struck two passenger vehicles that were stopped at the traffic signal, according to the Nevada Highway Patrol and Lyon County Sheriff’s Office. Two people were pronounced dead at the scene, and a third person was flown by Care Flight to a local hospital with life-threatening injuries.
The couple killed were identified by family as Sergio “Boo” and Jennifer Villanueva, who were stopped westbound at the light when they were hit from behind. The two were known locally for volunteering with the Boxers and Buddies dog rescue.
“Preliminary statements obtained at the scene suggest the driver of the truck might have fallen asleep,” the Lyon County Sheriff’s Office said. The Nevada State Police Highway Patrol is investigating.
The truck was a Tesla Semi
Local outlets, including the Reno Gazette-Journal and KOLO, described the vehicle only as a “semi-truck,” and the Nevada Highway Patrol has not officially released the make.
However, images from the scene clearly show a Tesla Semi — the distinctive center-seat, cab-forward tractor — pulling a white dry-van trailer. The identification was first flagged by FreightWaves’ Timothy Dooner.
That makes this the first known fatal crash involving Tesla’s electric semi truck. Tesla builds the Semi at its new high-volume production line at Gigafactory Nevada, a 1.7-million-square-foot plant located near Sparks, roughly an hour from the crash site. Tesla operates its own fleet of Semis out of the factory, and the truck’s location on U.S. 50 is consistent with that operation, though the operator has not been confirmed.
Tesla only began ramping customer deliveries of the Semi in 2026 after years of delays, with fleets like DHL and California port drayage operators taking early units. There are still only a few hundred of the trucks on the road, which makes a fatal crash involving one a notable first for the program.
No self-driving — and the emergency braking question
The reported cause — a driver falling asleep — puts the focus on the truck’s safety systems, not any self-driving software. Tesla does not offer Full Self-Driving on the Semi. Both production trims are listed as “designed for autonomy,” but the feature is still in testing: a Tesla Semi was spotted in California carrying FSD test hardware just three days before the crash, running without a trailer near Tesla’s engineering facilities. In other words, the driver was in full manual control.
That leaves the question of automatic emergency braking: why didn’t the truck slow or stop itself before hitting stationary vehicles at a lit intersection? AEB is designed for exactly this scenario — it detects vehicles or obstacles in the truck’s path and applies the brakes when a collision is imminent, regardless of driver input.
Most modern Class 8 trucks are already equipped with collision-mitigation systems from suppliers like Bendix and Detroit Assurance, and U.S. regulators have a proposed rule that would mandate AEB on all new heavy trucks, requiring them to fully stop for other vehicles at speeds up to 62 mph.
Tesla originally said the Semi comes with Enhanced Autopilot as standard and uses “the same camera set” as its passenger vehicles — the hardware that runs Automatic Emergency Braking as standard on the Model 3 and Model Y, braking for obstacles at speeds between roughly 3 and 124 mph. It has also said the Semi’s independent motors and wheels have active controls designed to prevent jackknifing. But Tesla has never published a Semi-specific active-safety spec, and it is not clear whether the truck’s forward-collision braking behaves the same way as in its cars, or whether it engaged before the crash.
Tesla did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Tesla already builds drowsiness detection — into its cars
Fatigue-detection technology is increasingly common in commercial trucking, but it remains an option rather than a standard or federally required feature. Most systems use an AI driver-facing camera that watches for prolonged eyelid closure, yawning, and head-nodding, then alerts the driver in real time. Fleets buy them from vendors like Netradyne, Lytx, Samsara, and Seeing Machines, and truck makers offer them as options — Detroit Assurance 5.0, for example, includes a driver-facing camera that ties into Bendix SafetyDirect.
Adoption is climbing fast among large carriers, and the FMCSA is evaluating whether to require fatigue monitoring for interstate trucking. Drowsy driving is a factor in an estimated 6,000 fatal crashes a year in the U.S., according to AAA Foundation research.
Tesla is arguably ahead on this — in its cars. The company rolled out a “Driver Drowsiness Warning” in 2023 that uses the cabin-facing camera to detect yawns and blinks and warn the driver, activating above 40 mph with Autopilot disengaged. Tesla has not said whether the Semi has a cabin-facing camera or the same feature — a notable gap for a truck reportedly involved in a fatal crash because its driver fell asleep.
But the system is also notoriously easy to game.
Electrek’s Take
This is a tragic story, and the first thing to say is that two people are dead and a third is fighting for their life. Our condolences go to the Villanueva family.
It’s also important to be precise about what this is and isn’t. This was not an autonomous driving crash. Tesla does not offer Full Self-Driving on the Semi — it’s still test-fleet hardware, spotted validating sensors in California just days earlier — so the driver was likely in full manual control. A driver falling asleep is a human-fatigue failure, not a software one, and anyone folding this into the FSD debate is confusing the story.
The real question here is about active safety. If a driver falls asleep and a truck plows into cars stopped at a red light, automatic emergency braking is the last line of defense that’s supposed to prevent a fatality — and it’s a system the entire trucking industry is moving toward mandating. Tesla originally said that the Semi ships with Enhanced Autopilot, but that was back when it unveiled the vehicle. Since entering production, Tesla has been quiet about the autonomous features its first commercial vehicle.
Tesla Semi is equipped with the same cameras that give its cars standard AEB, but it has never spelled out whether the truck’s forward-collision braking works the same way. Given that Tesla ships AEB on every car it sells, you’d expect the Semi to have an equivalent or better system. Whether it engaged here is a question that should get answered as the investigation proceeds.
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