Following the attacks on Tesla vehicles to spite its CEO Elon Musk for chairing the DOGE department and backing Trump’s policies, a website called Dogequest was launched which exposes the personal details of owners of the electric cars in the U.S. so they could be located and most likely attacked.
Dogequest revealed the names, addresses, and phone numbers of Tesla owners in the United States in an interactive map — and used an image of a Molotov cocktail as its cursor.

The Molotov cocktail cursor, which is basically a bottle with an inflammable liquid inside that is stuffed at the lid with a dry cloth that is lit on fire and used to create explosive fires, suggests that the locations of the Tesla owners as revealed on the website’s map should be burned or destroyed.
The website not only provided personal information of Tesla owners, it also provided details of its dealerships as well as DOGE employees.
However, the website said it was not created to support protests against Elon Musk and Trump nor does it support violence against Tesla owners.
Recently, an elderly man was arrested after he was apprehended by a witness keying a Tesla vehicle parked at a Costco at 2200 Senter Road lot in San Jose, on Friday. The car’s security camera also captured him perpetuating the crime, and the police said he would be charged with felony vandalism.
A few hours ago, many Tesla cars were set on fire at a Tesla dealership in Las Vegas, an act which the police are investigating as a targeted arson and attack. According to the police department, Molotov cocktails were among the deadly weapons used by the attacker who also shot many times at the center.
In Kansas City on Monday night, a Tesla dealership in Missouri was also attacked. A Cybertruck was set ablaze but the inferno was quickly subdued by firefighters after a second EV was caught in the inferno. The attack too is being investigated as part of the nationwide attack on Elon Musk.
In another video on social media, a man was lamenting that his Cybertruck was defaced with spray paint when he parked it to take someone to the hospital.
While the attacks on Tesla vehicles are ongoing, the informational website, Dogequest said details of Tesla vehicle owners can only be removed from the site if they provided proof that they have sold their EVs.
Fortunately, the website has been taken down at this moment and according to Internet Archive Wayback Machine, the domain was listed for sale on godaddy.com. However, the website owners envisaged its takedown and encouraged visitors to mirror their code and create theirs.
Below is a screenshot of what Dogequest.com looked like and some details on it before it was taken down:
