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A 12-year Intel veteran will become the new CEO of the self-driving car company Zoox, which lost its previous leader under mysterious circumstances (INTC)

Intel

  • Intel veteran Aicha Evans has been named the new CEO of the self-driving car company Zoox, according to the company on Monday. Evans will assume her new role as Zoox's CEO on February 26. 
  • Evans comes from a 12-year career at Intel, where she was serving as Chief Strategy Officer.
  • The company has 700 current employees and is valued at $3.2 billion after a $500 million funding round in July. 
  • Evans replaces former Zoox CEO and co-founder Tim Kentley-Klay, who left the company last year under mysterious circumstances. 

Intel veteran Aicha Evans has been named the new CEO of the self-driving car company Zoox, the company announced on Monday. Evans spent 12 years at Intel, most recently as its chief strategy officer. 

Zoox — a Foster City, California based startup founded in 2014 — is building both self-driving software and its own vehicle with the vision of creating fully autonomous, zero-emission fleet focused on ridesharing in cities. Zoox has 700 current employees and is valued at $3.2 billion after a $500 million funding round in July. 

“I’m thrilled to join Zoox and challenge the status quo with an autonomous mobility system built from the ground up,” Evans said in a company press release. "Mobility is approaching a major inflection point, and Zoox has set itself apart from entrenched players as the only company creating a solution purpose-built to meet the needs of a fully autonomous future."

Zoox declined to make Evans available to Business Insider for an interview. 

Evans will replace former Zoox CEO and co-founder Tim Kentley-Klay, who was apparently ousted by the company's board of directors in August "without a warning, cause or right of reply," he said in a statement on Twitter at the time.  The reason for Kentley-Klay's removal remains unknown to the public.

Read more: The founder of $3.2 billion startup Zoox says that he was ousted as CEO 'without a warning' because 'the board chose a path of fear'

Evans has some experience in Zoox's industry — at Intel, she led the company's long-term strategy, including its push into autonomous vehicles. 

Carl Bass, Zoox’s executive chairman and a member of its board, said that Evans is "an accomplished business leader and a strategic thinker with the right mix of skills to help turn Zoox’s ambitious vision into a reality." 

Evans will assume her new role as Zoox's CEO on February 26. 

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