Tesla is a stock promotion scheme that has run out of road

Deaths Mount as Lawyers Flee Tesla

Tesla has systematically hidden, delayed, or minimized reporting of its safety failures while maintaining its public image and stock valuation. The fact that a Japanese pedestrian death occurred so close to the high-profile Uber case, yet received minimal coverage, suggests coordinated efforts to suppress damaging information. But this pattern of deception runs far deeper than most investors realize.

Lawyer Exodus: No Legal Team Can Defend Them

Tesla can’t keep lawyers. The general counsel position rotates almost every year, and this isn’t normal corporate turnover—it’s a massive red flag that screams internal fraud and illegal practices.

The evidence is staggering:

  • Todd Maron (Musk’s former divorce lawyer): Left in December 2018
  • Dane Butswinkas (veteran trial lawyer from Williams & Connolly): Hired in December 2018, quit after just two months in February 2019, citing “poor cultural fit”
  • Jonathan Chang: Took over in February 2019, left by December 2019
  • William Berry: Left in March 2022
  • Brandon Ehrhart: Named in 2023, the company’s sixth legal leader since late 2019

But it gets worse. Tesla lost twelve lawyers in 2022 alone. Industry experts note that general counsel departures at this frequency are virtually unprecedented among major public companies. As one legal analyst observed: “General counsel folk don’t abruptly leave a job like this. Three in a row? My lawyer colleagues tell me this has so many red flags, there has to be something very bad going on.”

This isn’t a coincidence—it’s a pattern that suggests the company routinely engages in practices that no ethical lawyer wants to be associated with.

Hidden Death: Tesla’s Pedestrian Killer Cover-Up

While the world focused on Uber’s pedestrian fatality on March 18, 2018, Tesla was quietly dealing with its own deadly secret. Yoshihiro Umeda, a 44-year-old Japanese man, was killed on April 29, 2018—just six weeks later—when a Tesla Model X on Autopilot “suddenly accelerated” and crashed into pedestrians and motorcycles stopped at an accident scene near Tokyo.

Court documents filed in federal court describe this as the first “Tesla Autopilot-related death involving a pedestrian,” yet it received a fraction of the media attention that Uber’s case generated. The Tesla system failed to recognize stationary vehicles, motorcycles, and pedestrians, instead maintaining highway speed into a group of people trying to help accident victims.

This wasn’t an oversight—it was the beginning of Tesla’s systematic campaign to suppress information about Autopilot deaths while maintaining its “safer than human drivers” marketing narrative.

Software Lies: Cruel Experimentation on Human Lives

Tesla’s “Full Self-Driving” technology is fundamentally defective and has become a public safety crisis:

The Death Toll:

  • 2,300+ crashes involving Tesla’s driver assistance systems, compared to just 55 for GM’s SuperCruise
  • 59 documented Autopilot deaths, including multiple pedestrian fatalities
  • Tesla’s systems disengage less than one second before impact on average, effectively abandoning control at the moment of certain collision

The Cover-Up Pattern:

  • Months-long delays in reporting crashes to NHTSA, violating federal requirements
  • Tesla told NHTSA these delays were due to “errors” in their data collection systems
  • The company has waited months to report crashes that occurred “several months or more” before filing required safety reports

The Technical Failures:

  • Vision-only systems that cannot detect pedestrians unless they’re near crosswalks
  • Failure in basic driving conditions like sun glare—the same condition that killed Yoshihiro Umeda
  • Systems that misclassify objects multiple times per second, treating each new classification as a “brand new object”

Tesla continues to market this technology as “Full Self-Driving” while internal data shows it requires constant human supervision and fails in predictable scenarios.

Quality Crisis: Cars Nobody Actually Wants

Tesla’s vehicles are plagued with fundamental defects that the company has been unable to resolve:

The Recall Reality:

  • 83 total recalls since production began
  • 52 require physical dealership repairs—so much for “software-defined vehicles”
  • 376,241 vehicles recalled in 2025 alone for failing power steering systems
  • The Cybertruck averages one recall every 2.25 months since launch

Build Quality Breakdown:

  • Record inventory levels with no customer backlog for the first time in company history
  • Chronic problems including water leaks, seat belt failures, charging port malfunctions
  • Exterior panels that detach while driving (46,000 Cybertruck recall)
  • Consumer Reports documents widespread quality control issues across all model lines

The “Stealth Recall” Strategy:

Tesla has been caught requiring customers to sign non-disclosure agreements for safety-critical repairs, labeling them as “goodwill” fixes rather than recalls. NHTSA has called these agreements “troublesome” and noted they limit defect reporting.

The Demand Cliff: A Company in Free Fall

The market has finally seen through Tesla’s promises:

Sales Collapse:

  • First annual sales decline in company history (2024: -1.1%)
  • Q1 2025: -13% year-over-year while overall EV market grew 10%
  • No waiting lists: Model Y available for immediate delivery—a first in company history

Global Market Rejection:

  • Europe: -49% sales drop in early 2025
  • Australia: -70% year-over-year decline
  • Multiple European countries: -40% to -50% across the board
  • China: Losing market share to BYD and other domestic competitors

Tesla is desperately offering unprecedented incentives—0% financing, free charging, deeply discounted leases—and still can’t move inventory.

Financial Irregularities: Multiple Whistleblowers Sound Alarm

The financial reporting problems go far beyond normal corporate accounting disputes:

SEC Whistleblower Complaints:

  • 2021 complaint alleging Tesla “improperly categorized repairs and had poor control over internal systems used to capture data that later rolled up to financial reports”
  • Lukasz Krupski’s “Tesla Files”: 18,000 internal documents detailing alleged securities law violations
  • Martin Tripp’s evidence: $150 million in waste and scrap costs allegedly hidden from investors

Sales Number Manipulation:

  • 40% discrepancy between Tesla’s reported sales figures and actual vehicle registrations in some periods
  • Fake pre-orders: Multiple Cybertruck customers report being charged for orders they never placed
  • Canadian government investigation: Tesla claimed 8,653 EV incentive sales in 72 hours, with one store allegedly processing 2,558 sales in a single day

The SEC’s Response:

The Securities and Exchange Commission assigned just one person to review one portion of the 2021 whistleblower complaint, then closed the investigation without interviewing the whistleblowers or reviewing the 18,000 supporting documents they offered to provide.

The Enron Parallel: Why Tesla’s Collapse Will Be Worse

Like Enron, Tesla’s massive valuation is built on promises rather than profits:

The Valuation Disconnect:

  • 200+ price-to-earnings ratio while earnings decline for consecutive quarters
  • Stock price based on promises of robotaxis, humanoid robots, and energy storage—none of which generate meaningful revenue
  • 1.6% of S&P 500 weighting means Tesla’s collapse will drag down millions of 401(k) accounts

The Key Differences from Enron:

  • Tesla has actual body count: Real people are dying while the company covers up safety failures
  • Much larger market impact: Tesla’s market cap and index presence dwarf Enron’s influence
  • Retail investor exposure: Unlike Enron’s institutional investor base, Tesla is heavily held by individual investors and pension funds

The Coming Reckoning: Why Investors Must Exit Now

As Fred Lambert points out, some investors already get it, why the Elon Musk and Peter Thiel fraud scheme is fraud:

Tesla could fall 90% tomorrow, and I wouldn’t buy a share, because it’s just crazy overvalued Palantir, I wouldn’t buy a share—crazy overvalued.

Tesla exhibits every characteristic of a major corporate fraud:

  1. Systematic safety cover-ups with documented fatalities
  2. Unprecedented legal counsel flight indicating internal illegality
  3. Multiple SEC whistleblower complaints with extensive documentation
  4. Sales manipulation and reporting irregularities
  5. Product defects the company cannot resolve
  6. Collapsing demand despite desperate incentives

The Immediate Risks:

  • Federal criminal investigations into Full Self-Driving claims
  • Potential securities fraud charges based on whistleblower evidence
  • Product liability lawsuits from Autopilot deaths
  • Market share erosion as competitors deliver superior products

The Systemic Risk:

Tesla’s 1.6% S&P 500 weighting means its collapse will trigger broader market disruption. Index funds holding Tesla will be forced to sell, amplifying any decline and affecting millions of retirement accounts.

The Bottom Line

Tesla is not a car company or a technology company—it’s a stock promotion scheme that has run out of road. The pattern of dead lawyers, dead customers, and dead sales tells the story of a company that prioritizes stock price over human lives.

When Enron collapsed, it was primarily about financial fraud. When Tesla collapses, investigators will find both financial fraud and a trail of preventable deaths that the company systematically covered up to protect its stock price.

Tesla will collapse. The question is only how many more innocent people will be killed by them.

Investors should consider these documented patterns of regulatory violations, safety failures, and executive departures when making investment decisions. Tesla’s unprecedented legal counsel turnover alone represents a level of internal dysfunction rarely seen among major public companies.

Weak Keys on Camaro Muscle Car Make it Most Stolen in America

The insurance industry is throwing some serious shade at GM right now.

Relative to its numbers on the roads, the Camaro ZL1 had a whole-vehicle theft rate 39 times the average for all vehicles. […] On top of the high horsepower that makes the Camaro an attractive target, a technical glitch seems to have created new opportunities for thieves to steal it, according to news reports.

Thieves can steal modern vehicles by cloning the owner’s key fob with an electronic device. Ordinarily, they need access to the fob to copy it. But some media outlets have reported that thieves are able to clone the key code for newer Camaros by accessing the on-board ports that technicians use to retrieve diagnostic codes and monitor data about fuel economy, emissions and other aspects of performance.

Why AI Bubble Talk is Pop Nonsense

For all the times I’ve said the AI hype is way too overheated, I also dislike extreme cold. Where did all the balance go?

Fortune’s latest breathless reporting about a “tragic” AI market reads like buzzword bingo: insert “bubble,” add some dot-com references, quote a longtime insider skeptic, and call it analysis. But this lazy framing completely misreads the history it quotes and fundamentally misunderstands what’s actually happening.

The author leans too heavily on dramatic language (“tragic,” “underwhelming”) and seems to conflate stock valuations with technological viability. Insert nails on chalkboard.

The article follows the all too familiar template of gathering concerning quotes and market data without deeply examining whether current AI adoption patterns actually resemble historical bubbles. He said, she said, where’s the critical thinking?

Let me show what I mean. The dot-com crash wasn’t just a market correction—it was a techbro fraud filter. It cleared out companies sponging investors with marketing-oriented science fiction while preserving the real infrastructure that became the backbone of our digital economy. The Web won. The internet didn’t fail; the ruthless extractive speculation around it did.

Today’s AI situation is fundamentally different. Companies aren’t betting on hypothetical future revenue—customers already are operationally dependent and paying for AI as a service. Once you’ve integrated AI into your assembly lines like steam-powered machinery, you face a simple economic reality: pay for the AI and pay to clean up its mistakes, or pay the higher costs of reverting to manual processes.

This isn’t speculation anymore. It’s infrastructure, and like all powerful infrastructure, it demands safety protocols.

Calling AI a bubble because some stocks are overvalued is like calling the steam engine a bubble after factories have already been retrofitted with boilers but haven’t installed proper safety systems. Sure, some companies are overpaying, some investments won’t pan out, and some operations will catastrophically fail like an entire factory burning to the ground. But we’re well past the “will this work?” question and deep into the “how do we deploy this at scale without killing all the workers?” phase.

The Jungle by Upton Sinclair, clearly describing the reality of American industrialization, should be required reading in computer science degrees.

Sinclair wrote The Jungle to expose worker exploitation and advocate for labor rights, but the public was horrified by food contamination instead. The government responded with the Pure Food and Drug Act to protect consumers from tainted meat, while largely ignoring the workers who were being ground up by the same system.

Sinclair wanted to show how capitalism was destroying human beings, but readers fixated on their own safety as consumers rather than the systematic dehumanization of workers. The government gave people clean food while leaving the fundamental power imbalances and dangerous working conditions intact.

The AI parallel is unmistakable: we’re so focused on whether AI stocks are overvalued (protecting investors) that we’re missing the much more serious question of what happens to the people whose lives and livelihoods get processed through these systems without adequate safeguards.

The real regulatory challenge is less about market bubbles and more about preventing algorithmic systems from treating humans like they are contaminated byproducts of the industrial technology boom Sinclair exposed.

And just like 1906, we’re probably going to get consumer protection laws (maybe some weak-sauce transparency requirements) while the fundamental power dynamics and safety issues for the people actually affected by these systems get ignored. It’s the same pattern again: worry on Wall Street about the symptom that scares the powerful, ignore the causes that harm the powerless at scale.

We’re seeing the consequences of rushing powerful automation into critical systems we depend on without adequate safeguards, like the industrial equivalent of the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory disaster, where really bad algorithmic decision-making functions like the doors that don’t open in a fire.

Fortune’s bubble talk, complete with cartoon analogies about Wile E. Coyote, reveals a fundamental misunderstanding of technological adoption cycles. When automation becomes operationally essential, market corrections don’t reverse the underlying transformation—they reset the price of admission and, hopefully, force better safety standards.

The real story is how AI slowly moved from experimental to indispensable as a 1950s concept dismissed in the 1980s before exploding in the early 2010s. Do you know what else followed that exact slow 30 year cycle?

Cloud computing.

The 1950s time-sharing concept reached explosive adoption in the 2010s, just like AI is doing now. A generation from idea to infrastructure in both cases, except one of them was rebranded. Calling the cloud a bubble today would be absurd.

Similarly the AI bubble predictions will age as poorly as Oracle saying there was no cloud, Sun Microsystems claiming there was no privacy, or IBM declaring there was no future for personal computing.

It’s not just a tech pattern to watch, it’s how human societies adopt transformative technologies for infrastructure across generational timescales.