Details emerge on the cause of a violent crash with a Corvette at GM Proving Ground

The Detroit Free Press has obtained documents that detail the moments leading up to a violent crash in June involving a General Motors’ engineer and a Corvette he was testing at GM Proving Ground in Milford that left the engineer with life-threatening injuries.

There are 147 miles of test roads at the proving ground. This accident happened on GM’s Ride and Handling course, which resembles a two-lane freeway with a posted speed limit of 75 mph, according to the incident report by the Michigan State Police. The Detroit Free Press obtained the report through a Freedom of Information Act request.

The report, completed in late-August, said state police Senior Patrol Leader Sgts. Chad Lindstrom and Gregory Kamp investigated the accident. Their reconstruction of it revealed the series of events leading to the car leaving the road, spinning out of control, taking out a tree, before ending up in the woods, ripped in half and bursting into flames. They listed excessive speed as a contributing factor, but did not specify a reason for the car’s excessive speed.

Here is what is left of the back end of the Corvette that split in two upon impact with a tree and burst into flames at General Motors Proving Ground in Milford on June 22, 2023, during a test drive. The driver, who police said was going too fast and lost control of the car, has been left with critical injuries.

GM spokesman Kevin Kelly confirmed there was “a single vehicle accident at the grounds that resulted in an injury of an employee.” He declined to provide specifics, but added, “none of our safety protocols have changed at this time.”

GM plans to review the accident report itself, Kelly said.

Standard test drive on a nice day

The skies above Milford were mostly cloudy midmorning on June 22. It was about 73 degrees with a soft 9-mph wind drifting from the east and southeast when the 2023 gray Chevrolet Corvette Z06 Convertible started out on its test drive, the report said.

The police report redacted the name of the driver, but the Detroit Free Press has learned from three sources that it was engineer Shawn Getty. Getty, a vehicle system integration engineer, has been with GM for about 11 years, according to his LinkedIn page. The sources asked to not be named because they are not authorized to speak publicly about the incident.

Skid marks left on the roadway and in the grass after GM vehicle system integration engineer Shawn Getty lost control of the 2023 Corvette he was testing and it crashed into a tree, splitting in two and catching fire. The crash happened on the Ride and Handling Loop at General Motors Proving Ground in Milford. Getty sustained multiple internal injuries and third-degree burns on over 70% of his body.

The Corvette was driving along a straightaway section of the Ride and Handling track that consists of “several chatter (design) bumps, with the roadway surface having a corrugated-like (ripple) presentation. This type of roadway is common for test tracks and simulates roadways open to the public, in disrepair,” the police report said. But police note that were no signs of disrepair to this track.

Police said that prior to the test drive, the car — which was a prototype — had undergone a complete vehicle software update. This was to be a “standard procedure test drive.” The report said: “It was advised the update completed was not unique in the sense that it was a prototype; it was already in production vehicles and currently in vehicles being operated on the open roadways.”

‘Crawled from the wreckage’

At about 10:42 a.m. the vehicle left the road and one minute later, the OnStar Security Team was notified of a crash that involved a Chevrolet on the Milford Proving Ground. GM was notified of the crash at 10:44 a.m., which prompted a response from the proving ground’s emergency team, the report stated.

“Maintenance/grounds personnel observed smoke from the fire and eventually located the driver of the vehicle, who had suspectedly crawled from the wreckage site to the roadway’s edge,” the report stated. “The driver was said to have critical injuries.”

Scars on a tree with the burned wreckage in the background after GM vehicle system integration engineer Shawn Getty lost control of the 2023 Corvette he was testing and it crashed into a tree, splitting in two and catching fire. The crash happened on the Ride and Handling Loop at General Motors Proving Ground in Milford. Getty sustained multiple internal injuries and third-degree burns on over 70% of his body.

GM personnel called for a life flight to the University of Michigan Hospital. According to a GoFundMe page created on July 10 by the driver’s sister, Danielle Getty, he is fighting for his life. It reads that “Shawn was involved in an accident while at work … it involved a vehicle fire where he sustained multiple internal injuries and 3rd-degree burns on over 70% of his body (including his head and face). He was airlifted to a Michigan hospital where he will remain in the trauma ICU burn unit in life-threatening critical care. He is heavily sedated due to his injuries and will be undergoing multiple surgeries.”