A 76-year-old woman was killed inside her own living room Friday night after a Tesla reportedly operating with automated driving assistance crashed through a suburban home in Texas.
Martha Avila died on June 19 in Katy, Texas, after a Tesla driven by 44-year-old Michael Butler left a quiet residential street and smashed into the front of the house, according to KHOU. The vehicle was said to have been in Autopilot mode at the time.
Butler was driving a Tesla Model 3 at around 8 p.m. local time when the crash occurred, the Harris County Sheriff’s Office said, noting that the vehicle was being operated “with an automated driving assistance system.”
Inside the home at the time were two parents, three young children and Avila, turning an ordinary evening for the family into a devastating tragedy.
“She (Avila) didn’t deserve to go this way,” her grieving relatives told KHOU.
Doorbell camera footage shared on X captured the terrifying sequence as the Tesla crossed an intersection, veered off the roadway and headed directly toward Avila’s property.
The car hit the brick exterior with enough force to break through the home and come to rest in the playroom.
The footage also recorded the piercing sound of the vehicle as it crashed into the house.
Emergency crews rushed to the scene where Life Flight airlifted Avila to hospital, and was later pronounced dead after life-saving measures were performed.

Avila was killed when a Tesla allegedly on ‘Autopilot mode’ crashed into her house on June 19

Avila’s family shared photos of her with KHOU 11 and admitted they remain in shock as they grapple to comprehend what happened

Footage uploaded to x showed the moment of impact
Avila’s family shared photos of her with KHOU 11, telling the news outlet they are still grappling with what has happened.
Her husband Justin Barbour relayed that he was cooking at the stove 30 seconds before the fatal crash.
Jennifer Barbour, Avila’s daughter, told KHOU she was in the backyard when she heard a loud boom.
According to the outlet, Barbour frantically found her husband and three children, but after the dust and smoke settled, she discovered her mother had been struck.
‘My three kids were at my neighbor’s when we went to the hospital to check on my mom,” Barbour said. ‘And then they told us they couldn’t save her.’
Barbour also described the moment she had to inform the children that their Grandma was gone.
‘I’m still wearing the same clothes from yesterday.’ Barbour said, adding that the family is currently staying in a hotel.
Butler also sustained injuries in the crash but is still alive after being taken to hospital by ambulance.
Butler who was behind the wheel at the time, also sustained injuries in the crash but is still alive after being taken to hospital by ambulance.

Jennifer Barbour, Avila’s daughter, told KHOU she was in the backyard when she heard a loud boom

‘I’m still wearing the same clothes from yesterday.’ Barbour said, adding that the family is currently staying in a hotel while the home is damaged
Investigators have stated that Butler showed no signs of intoxication and is co-operating fully with authorities.
Harris County Sherriff’s Office Sgt. Alex Turman, an accident investigator and public information officer, told ABC’s Alex Presha that the cause of the crash has not been determined.
‘We’re digging into that. That’s a line of investigation for sure,’ Turman responded, when asked whether the vehicle’s automated driving features were in use.
Turman added that investigators are working with people familiar with Tesla vehicles and with the driver to determine ‘what role the driver’s control over the car played in this crash.’
Tesla’s controversial ‘Autopilot’ feature, despite its name, is not a fully self-driving system and still requires constant driver supervision.
Critics argue the branding is dangerously misleading, lulling motorists into a false sense of security, who may assume the car is capable of driving itself.
However, online spectators remain unconvinced about the lack of responsibility adopted by Butler.
‘Autopilot will adjust to the speed limits of the street unless you intentionally speed the car up.’ One said.
‘Autopilot at that speed in a residential area… Riiiiight…’ added another skeptic.

Tesla’s controversial ‘Autopilot’ feature, despite its name, is not a fully self-driving system and still requires constant driver supervision.

Musk said in December that he expects to have fully autonomous vehicles in somewhere ‘between a quarter and half of the United States’ by the end of the year
The Daily Mail has reached out to the Harris County Sherriff’s office and Tesla for comment.
This is not the first incident involving Teslas in Texas in recent months.
In April, a driver reported that his Tesla randomly accelerated through a railroad gate, only narrowly missing a fast approaching train.
A year prior, NHTSA launched an investigation into roughly 2.9 million Tesla vehicles over ‘Full Self-Driving’ running red lights and driving the wrong way, and the agency upgraded that probe in March 2026 to an engineering analysis.