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Tesla Issues Apology Over the Way It Handled a Customer in China Whose Parents Were Left Hospitalized The customer had claimed that faulty brakes in her family's Model 3 sedan led to a serious crash.

By Justin Chan

Facing criticism over its customer service in China, Tesla issued a rare apology to a customer who had alleged that faulty brakes in her family's car had led to a dangerous crash that left her parents hospitalized.

On Tuesday, the electric vehicle manufacturer took to Weibo, China's version of Twitter, to address the incident, saying, "We apologize for failing to resolve the problem of the car owner in time. We will try our best to learn the lessons of this experience."

Related: Once Again, Elon Musk Said Something That Could Get Him in Trouble

On Monday, the customer went viral after climbing on top of a Tesla at an auto show in Shanghai to draw attention to the company's handling of her complaint. She was seen wearing a T-shirt with a message that read, "The brakes don't work."

According to the Wall Street Journal, Tesla had responded to the woman's accusations a month earlier, claiming that her father had, in fact, sped at the time of the crash. Tesla Vice President Grace Tao appeared to dismiss the woman's allegations again in a local interview on Monday, suggesting that someone had put the woman up to the protest.

The company's handling of the woman's complaint sparked backlash from Chinese social media users, government agencies and state newspapers.

In the hours before Tesla issued an apology, China's Central Political and Legal Affairs Commission, which oversees the government's legal arm, posted a statement of its own on Weibo, saying, "Tesla has to face up to the torment of its Chinese customers" and stop "pretending to be oblivious to hidden dangers of which it's well aware," according to a translation from the Wall Street Journal.

Similarly, China's Global Times slammed the company's stance, commenting, "The arrogant and overbearing stance the company exhibited in front of the public is repugnant and unacceptable, which could inflict serious damage on its reputation and customer base in the Chinese market.

Tesla has also faced issues at home. On Tuesday, Texas police served search warrants on Tesla after the company suggested that a car's Autopilot feature was not responsible for a deadly crash.

Justin Chan

Entrepreneur Staff

News Writer

Justin Chan is a news writer at Entrepreneur.com. Previously, he was a trending news editor at Verizon Media, where he covered entrepreneurship, lifestyle, pop culture, and tech. He was also an assistant web editor at Architectural Record, where he wrote on architecture, travel, and design. Chan has additionally written for Forbes, Reader's Digest, Time Out New YorkHuffPost, Complex, and Mic. He is a 2013 graduate of Columbia Journalism School, where he studied magazine journalism. Follow him on Twitter at @jchan1109.

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