Associated Incidents

Tempe police released photographs from the pedestrian death involving an Uber self-driving car. A 49-year-old woman was hit and killed by a self-driving Volvo operated by Uber while crossing a street in Tempe (Photo: Tempe Police Department)
The driver behind the wheel of an autonomous Uber vehicle that fatally struck a woman in Tempe in March was watching "The Voice" via a streaming service in the minutes leading up to the crash, a police report says.
The detailed report of more than 300 pages was released by Tempe police Thursday night, along with video and photos from the scene of the March 18 collision. Also released was the 911 call made by the driver, Rafaela Vasquez, 44, after the crash.
The documents indicate police are seeking manslaughter charges against Vasquez.
The Mill Avenue collision, which killed 49-year-old Elaine Herzberg as she walked across the street midblock, was the first fatal crash with a pedestrian and a self-driving car.
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The material includes blurred video from officers' body cameras. One video captures an officer's conversation with Vasquez still seated behind the wheel.
"The car was in auto-drive," Vasquez says to the officer.
"All of a sudden ... the car didn't see it, I couldn't see it," she says. "I know I hit her.''
CLOSE Tempe police released body camera video in the nation's first pedestrian death involving an autonomous vehicle. A woman was hit while crossing a street. Tempe Police Department
Uber said Friday that interacting with any mobile device, including smart watches, while operating one of its vehicles on a public road is a fireable offense, and that policy is made clear to employees in training and through workplace posters.
In light of the accident, the company plans to bolster its safety training, the company said.
“We have a strict policy prohibiting mobile device usage for anyone operating our self-driving vehicles," a company spokesperson said in a written statement. "We plan to share more on the changes we’ll make to our program soon.”
Vasquez was let go from the company along with all the other autonomous drivers in Arizona when Uber decided to end its tests here in May, the company official said.
Vasquez was trained and expected to remain attentive to take control of the vehicle and avoid a collision, according to the company.
"Our system is a developmental self-driving system, which requires the close attention of a human operator at all times," Uber's spokesperson said. "Our operators are expected to maintain attentiveness to the road ahead and react when the system fails to do so, and are trained to uphold this responsibility."
Vasquez was given a field test and police initially determined she was not impaired. A few days after the crash, police obtained a search warrant for Vasquez's two cellphones and served warrants on three companies that provide streaming services — Hulu, Netflix and Google, which owns YouTube — in an effort to determine if the driver had been watching shows on her phones while driving.
One of those providers, Hulu, later provided a record of usage on one of Vasquez's phones that showed she was watching "The Voice,'' a talent competition show on NBC, right before the collision. The Hulu record showed her streaming ended at 21:59 hours — or 9:59 p.m.
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The crash occurred at 10 p.m., according to records.
Tempe police, in the report, reviewed video from inside the Volvo XC90 — some of which previously was made public — that showed Vasquez looking down moments before the crash.
“She appears to be looking down at the area near her right knee at various points in the video,'' the report says. "Sometimes, her face appears to react and show a smirk or laugh at various points during the times that she is looking down. Her hands are not visible in the frame of the video during these times.’’
The report details an exhaustive analysis of data from the vehicle and re-enacting the crash at the site.
CLOSE Tempe police have released the audio of Rafaela Vasquez, 44, calling 911 after fatally hitting a pedestrian on March 18, 2018 Arizona Republic
The analysis showed that nine video segments from dashboard cameras in the vehicle covered 11.8 miles prior to the crash. During that distance, Vasquez looked down 204 times toward her right knee, the report says. Of the nearly 22 minutes that elapsed during that distance, Vasquez was looking down for 6 minutes and 47 seconds.
"This crash would not have occurred if Vasquez would have been monit