San Francisco Officers Pulled Over a Driverless GM Cruise

San Francisco Officers Pulled Over a Driverless GM Cruise
A Cruise self-driving taxi in a file photo. Courtesy of Cruise via Benzinga
Benzinga
Updated:
General Motors Co.-owned, self-driving taxi service Cruise’s unusual pit stop on a San Francisco street last week left onlookers in splits.

What Happened

A driverless Cruise-converted Chevy Bolt was pulled over by San Francisco traffic police officers.

The vehicle complied, made the stop, and then zipped to a safer spot ahead of the traffic lights with the police following it.

The three-minute clip of the incident was shared on Instagram by the user handle b.rad916.
The incident, which occurred in the Richmond District of San Francisco last week, had some onlookers in splits.

Cruise Reacts

The self-driving taxi service reacted on social media, saying its vehicle was not issued any citation by the officers.

“Our AV yielded to the police vehicle, then pulled over to the nearest safe location for the traffic stop, as intended. An officer contacted Cruise personnel and no citation was issued,” the self-driving startup said on Twitter.

“We work closely with the SFPD on how to interact with our vehicles, including a dedicated phone number for them to call in situations like this.”

Why It Matters

GM’s Cruise has been offering light-duty driverless rides to passengers at night in some parts of San Francisco between 10 p.m. and 6 a.m. local time, at a maximum speed limit of 30 miles per hour.
By Rachit Vats
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