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US Safety Board to Hold Hearing on Two Fatal Ford Crashes

The National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) will hold an?hearing on March 31 to determine the probable causes of two fatal accidents involving Ford Motors'?hands free advanced driver assistance?system BlueCruise.

In both crashes, 2024, Ford Mustang Mach-Es of the 2022 model year were operating in partial automation mode. The Ford SUVs hit stationary vehicles in San Antonio and Philadelphia at highway speeds.

The crashes raise serious concerns about the limitations of the current system. The NTSB will vote on "safety suggestions designed to prevent future crashes."

Both the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration and the National Traffic Safety Board have been investigating BlueCruise since 2025 to answer questions about system limitations and evaluate drivers' abilities to respond. BlueCruise, an advanced hands-free system, operates on 97% of U.S. highways and Canadian highways without intersections or traffic lights.

NHTSA upgraded its investigation to an engineering review in January 2025.

Ford says BlueCruise has been used in 17 countries, covering more than 500,000,000 miles of highway travel. In 2025, Ford said that 2,5 million vehicles would be equipped with BlueCruise.

Ford stated that BlueCruise was a convenience feature developed in accordance with the industry standards for partial autonomous driving. We've made thoughtful, deliberate choices during product development and marketing to ensure safety and clarity of use.

In the San Antonio 'crash', a Ford truck on Interstate 10 hit a 1999 Honda CR-V that was stationary, killing the Honda CR-V driver. And in the Philadelphia crash a Ford truck on Interstate 95 struck a pair of stationary cars, causing them collide with a Toyota Corolla, and both the Prius & Elantra drivers were killed.

In both crashes, the NTSB stated that "no driver or system-initiated steering or braking was recorded in?moments prior to impact."

In recent years, the NTSB opened several investigations into advanced driver assistance systems such as Tesla's Autopilot. Tesla, the electric car manufacturer, agreed in December 2023 to recall 2,000,000 vehicles and install new safety measures for its Autopilot driver-assistance system.

(source: Reuters)