Characterizing the highly complex aero-propulsive interaction in Distributed Electric Propulsion (DEP) aircraft, may require automated flight testing procedures with dedicated maneuvers, which introduce specific safety challenges. This paper investigates an accident involving a distributed electric propulsion research demonstrator, named SwitchMaster, during an automated flight-test mission for aerodynamic model identification. The event occurred during a scheduled pitch excitation maneuver and resulted in a loss of control followed by ground impact. The investigation is based on flight logs, telemetry analysis, and structured accident investigation methods, including the ICAO ADREP taxonomy and the Swiss Cheese Model. The results show that the accident resulted from the combination of asymmetric trim acquisition, open-loop control surface fixation, insufficient real-time safety barriers, ineffective maneuver interruption, and delayed recovery authority. The paper is concluded with safety recommendations, software improvements and lessons learnt to enhance the reliability of automated flight testing for DEP aircraft.