
In the US
There will be a story that someone (government or someone in Tesla) had a self-driving car awake and drive somewhere with no human present, for the purpose of assistance in some emergency.
Counts:
A older man didn't answer his daughters calls for three days. She persuaded Tesla to enable his Tesla video and drive the car around his farm looking for him, relaying video
A criminal is driving a Tesla he owns recklessly and claims to have a bomb. The police receive help from Tesla to turn the car away from a school and to an isolated field to protect the public. The man is locked in his own car and cannot control it manually.
Would also count if they just remote disable it at the request of law enforcement while he was driving.
Police convince Tesla to waken and drive a bunch of cars to smash through a wall which is preventing them from saving some people. Owners were not informed beforehand.
Does not count
Disabling a car while no one is driving for nonpayment or other reason. This isn't an emergency situation so doesn't count.
Criteria:
It must be self-driven to do something in an emergency. Either onboard self-driving or remotely.
It cannot be normal operation such as a car automatically becoming self-driving if it detects owner is drunk or batter is super low or on fire
This state must be remotely imposed
It can be with or without owner consent or knowledge