On November 27, 2024, the vehicle slammed into a retaining wall in Piedmont, California, and erupted into an inferno that would claim three young lives. Driver Soren Dixon, 19, and passenger Jack Nelson, 20, were recent graduates of Piedmont High School like Krysta, all home for the holiday break. They had gathered to celebrate their reunion, their whole lives still unfolding before them. But the Cybertruck’s collision with concrete transformed the stainless steel vehicle from a status symbol into a deathtrap.
Krysta survived the initial impact with only minor injuries. She was awake, aware, and screaming. A friend driving behind them witnessed the horror and rushed forward with desperate courage, grabbing a tree branch from the roadside and smashing it against the passenger window ten to fifteen times until the glass finally cracked. He managed to drag the barely conscious Jordan Miller—the sole survivor—from the front seat moments before flames turned the cabin into an oven. But Krysta remained in the back, clawing at doors that would not budge, the 12-volt battery system having failed and rendered the electronic latches immovable. A Good Samaritan tried to pull her through the small opening, but the heat and toxic smoke forced them back. She died from smoke inhalation and severe burns, enduring what her family’s lawsuit describes as “unimaginable pain and emotional distress” while the world outside tried and failed to save her.The crash investigation revealed that Dixon was operating the vehicle with a blood alcohol level of 0.195—more than twice the legal limit—along with methamphetamine and cocaine in his system. Autopsy reports confirmed that Krysta and Nelson had also consumed alcohol and cocaine that night. The California Highway Patrol cited speeding and impaired driving as contributing factors, and Tesla will almost certainly point to these tragic decisions in its defense. But the victims’ families argue that intoxication does not excuse engineering that transforms a survivable accident into an execution by entrapment.Family