Student ‘burned alive’ after being trapped by her Tesla

Krysta Tsukahara should have walked away from that crash. Instead, as her friends lay unconscious, she was alive, aware, and trapped in a cabin filling with smoke. The Cybertruck’s electronics died on impact, the doors froze, and the only manual escape was hidden where terrified, injured passengers could not find it in the dark. A friend shattered one window and pulled a single survivor out, but Krysta was pushed back by heat and flame, her last moments spent fighting a door that would never open.

 
 

Now her parents and another grieving family are suing Tesla, accusing the company of choosing sleek, electric door systems over basic, intuitive safety. They argue this wasn’t a freak accident but a foreseeable failure: a trillion‑dollar brand selling a machine that can become a steel tomb. Their fight is no longer just about one night, but about every driver who trusts that “innovation” won’t cost them their last chance to live.