A Tesla battery powered car that crashed, burst into flames and burned its driver beyond recognition Sunday evening along Flamingo Road in Davie caught fire again Monday morning from a ruptured battery, police said.
The 4-door 2016 Tesla Model S was northbound near the 1300 block of S. Flamingo Road shortly before 4:30 p.m. Sunday when “the vehicle left the roadway for unknown reasons,” police said.
The car swerved through three lanes of traffic, hit a median and some trees and burst into flames, killing the driver.
Police Monday identified the driver as a man, Omar Awan. A Davie police officer got to the scene, a little south of Interstate 595 almost immediately after the crash and found the car fully consumed by fire. “Efforts to extract the driver were unsuccessful,” Davie Police Sgt. Mark Leone said by email Monday morning.
Awan died at the scene and because of the extent of his burn injuries the Broward County Medical Examiner’s Office is investigating to confirm his identity.
According to police, Awan’s wife was tracking his whereabouts by cellphone and got to the crash scene during the investigation.
Witnesses told officers that the Tesla appeared to be traveling between 75 and 90 mph when the crash happened and initial evidence from the scene appears to confirm that, Leone said.
The Tesla was eventually towed to A Superior Towing on Southwest 66th Terrace in Davie, where, according to Leone, it reignited and caught fire “once again from a ruptured battery,” shortly before 5 a.m. Monday.
Teslas do not use gasoline-powered engines. The carmaker’s vehicles are powered by batteries.
There is a “post-crash potential” of fire if a battery cell is punctured, “just like there would be post-crash with a gas tank,” industry analyst Karl Brauer told the South Florida Sun Sentinel last year. Fire is possible in any vehicle accident, which causes sparks and heat, he added.