Student, 20, suffers nightmarish injuries after his Tesla crashed

A promising 20-year-old college student suffered life-altering injuries after his crashed Tesla was engulfed in flames, according to a lawsuit against the electric vehicle maker

Jay Kharbanda, a biochemistry major at Stony Brook University, alleges a defective battery design turned his 2024 Tesla Model 3 into a fireball after a collision with a roadside utility pole in Long Island.

Kharbanda was driving to his home on June 30, 2025, when he says another vehicle turned in front of him in Dix Hills, about 40 miles east of Manhattan.

The collision sent the Tesla into the pole at the intersection of Old Country Road and Newtown Road in Plainview, according to a lawsuit filed in federal court in Brooklyn.

‘I blacked out,’ Kharbanda told the New York Post. ‘I just remember getting hit, and that’s it.’

The lawsuit alleges the impact caused the car’s high-voltage lithium-ion battery to fail ‘catastrophically,’ triggering a phenomenon known as thermal runaway, in which overheating battery cells ignite one another in a rapidly escalating chain reaction.

Kharbanda’s lawyer, Scott Epstein, told the Post that the vehicle became ‘a literal hell on earth.’ Video of the crash shows flames shooting from the red Tesla as Kharbanda lay injured on the ground nearby.

Kharbanda said he does not know how he escaped the burning car. He was later told that the doors malfunctioned and bystanders smashed a window to pull him to safety.

He woke up at Nassau University Medical Center, where he spent two months undergoing painful treatment.

The former high school sprinter suffered third- and fourth-degree burns to his lower legs, severe burns to his face and left hand, torn knee ligaments, and the amputation of several toes on his left foot.

He underwent four surgeries, multiple skin grafts, and weeks of daily hyperbaric oxygen treatments. ‘I was coughing up and sneezing black soot for two or three weeks,’ Kharbanda told the Post.

Kharbanda, who hopes to pursue a career in medicine, said the ordeal has left him too traumatized to drive. ‘I think Tesla should realize that their cars aren’t as safe as they make them out to be,’ he said.

His father, Gagan Kharbanda, said the family expects to face at least $800,000 in medical bills. ‘I lost my whole world when I saw him,’ he told the Post.

Kharbanda is seeking unspecified damages, including punitive damages intended to hold Tesla accountable. Tesla did not respond to the New York Post’s request for comment.

Kharbanda said he now relies on Uber or rides from his parents. ‘I don’t think it’s worth it,’ he said.

The Daily Mail has gone to Tesla for comment.

See more here dailymail.com

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Comments (3)

  • Avatar

    very old white guy

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    So much for reducing CO2.

    Reply

  • Avatar

    Michael J

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    This is not a new problem and why I refuse to buy a car with 400++ lbs of Lithium batteries under the seats.

    Reply

  • Avatar

    Dave

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    ALL EVs, Unsafe at any Speed!🔥🔥🔥

    Reply

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