tagged w/ NHTSA
-
Toyota to agree to $16.4M government fine
Sunday, April 18, 2010
Toyota is expected to agree to a $16.4 million fine for its delay in telling the government about defective gas pedals. (KABC Photo)
WASHINGTON -- Toyota Motor Corp. is expected to agree to a fine of more than $16 million, the largest government penalty levied against an automaker, for a four-month delay in telling federal authorities about defective gas pedals on its vehicles, a Transportation Department official said Sunday.
Toyota faces a Monday deadline to accept or contest the $16.4 million fine over evidence it knew about sticking gas pedals in September but did not issue a recall until January.
The Transportation official was not authorized to speak publicly and spoke only on condition of anonymity. The official said Toyota is expected to pay the full amount of the assessed fine within 30 days as a means of avoiding going to court against the government.
The official said Toyota did not intend to accept liability explicitly. But from the government's viewpoint, the official said, the agreement to pay the full fine constituted an acceptance of responsibility for hiding the safety defect in violation of the law.
Toyota did not immediately comment on the fine. Under federal law, automakers are required to notify the government within five business days when they find a potential safety defect.
Toyota announced it would recall 2.3 million vehicles in January to address sticking pedals on popular vehicles such as the Camry and Corolla. The Japanese automaker has recalled more than 8 million vehicles worldwide because of acceleration problems in multiple models and braking issues in the Prius hybrid.
Concerns about sticking gas pedals and complaints from Toyota owners in the U.S. were rising at the end of 2009, according to chronologies of the investigation Toyota provided to the government.
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration said documents provided by Toyota showed the automaker had known about the sticky pedal defect at least since Sept. 29, 2009, when it issued repair procedures to distributors in 31 European countries to address complaints of sticking pedals, sudden increases in engine RPM and sudden vehicle acceleration.
The documents also showed that Toyota knew that owners in the United States had experienced the same problems.
The Japanese automaker has been weighing its options since the fine was announced in early April but analysts expected it to pay the penalty.
The company has been named in 138 potential class-action lawsuits over falling vehicle values and about 100 personal injury and wrongful death cases in federal courts. Federal prosecutors and the Securities and Exchange Commission are conducting investigations related to the recalls.
"When you look at the toll it's taken on Toyota's reputation, when you look at the number of vehicles involved, when you look at the hardship it's placed on Toyota's customer base, it's only right for Toyota to take this fine," said Dennis Virag, president of Automotive Consulting Group based in Ann Arbor, Mich.
Transportation officials have not ruled out additional fines. The department is reviewing whether Toyota delayed for six weeks the late January recall of the 2009-2010 Venza in the United States to address floor mats that could entrap the accelerator pedal after making a similar recall in Canada.
Toyota recalled the Venza in Canada in December and reported to the U.S. government on Dec. 16 that the floor mats could move forward while the vehicle is in use and "may interfere with the accelerator pedal."
Toyota told U.S. authorities at the time that the floor mats in question were not imported into the U.S. but the Venza was added to the floor mat recall in late January.
http://digiads.com.au/car-news/images/2006/11/thumbs/lrg_article_8430-img_0.jpgToyota to agree to $16.4M government fine
Sunday, April 18, 2010
Toyota is... more
-
-
The US transport department is asking Toyota to pay a record fine of $16.4m (£10.7m) for holding back information about faulty accelerator pedals.
link : http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/8604150.stmThe US transport department is asking Toyota to pay a record fine of $16.4m... more
-
-
suzane
-
added this
-
2 years ago
- |
-
February 28, 2010
Toyota deaths (Detroit Free Press) Shrieks filled Mark Saylor's Lexus as it slammed into another vehicle, then careened into an embankment, killing all four on board.
At least 56 people have died in U.S. traffic accidents in which sudden unintended acceleration of Toyota Motor Corp.
Here are the Hororrific Accounts of Fatalities, based on Public Records...VIDEO....http://ctpatriot1970.wordpress.com/2010/02/28/toyota-at-least-56-deaths-from-sudden-acceleration-horrifying-accounts-of-fatalities-video/
Vehicles has been alleged, according to complaints filed with the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, lawsuits and police and state highway patrol reports. Some of the victims’ names are unknown because NHTSA did not disclose them and they could not be confirmed through other sources. A Toyota spokesman declined to comment, saying the company does not discuss cases in which litigation has been, or could be, filed.February 28, 2010
Toyota deaths (Detroit Free Press) Shrieks filled Mark... more
-
-
By Christina Zdanowicz and Wayne Drash, CNN
February 11, 2010 3:49 p.m. EST
Atlanta, Georgia (CNN) -- The Toyota Prius sometimes accelerates while in cruise control, rocketing past the set speed and sending drivers on wild rides, according to some owners and auto safety experts.
The most prominent Prius owner to voice concern over the issue is Steve Wozniak, the co-founder of Apple and owner of several Priuses, including a 2010 model.
"This new model," Wozniak said during the Discovery Forum 2010 earlier this month, "has an accelerator that goes wild but only under a certain condition of cruise control."
The computer guru blamed the problem not on floor mats or a sticky accelerator pedal, as Toyota has maintained, but on bad software. An exasperated Wozniak expressed frustration with his efforts to contact Toyota and the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.
"I don't know a way to get heard," he said. "I don't know a way to get through to the government, the government safety people."
Clarence Ditlow, the executive director of the Center for Auto Safety, a Washington-based group focused on car safety, said his group has received about 10 cruise-control complaints from Prius owners -- roughly 5 percent of the overall complaints his organization has received about the hybrid.
"We do have reports from some consumers that the vehicle does some things erratically," Ditlow said. "Do we know what's causing it to do that? No. But it's not what the agency [NHTSA] is looking at."
The Prius is among the 8.5 million Toyota vehicles recalled in recent months for problems related to gas pedals and brakes. Just this week, Toyota recalled hundreds of thousands of 2010 Priuses for problems associated with its brake system.
Click on link to read entire article:
http://www.cnn.com/2010/US/02/11/prius.cruise.control/index.html?hpt=T2By Christina Zdanowicz and Wayne Drash, CNN
February 11, 2010 3:49 p.m. EST... more
-
-
By Dan Carney, contributor
Toyota says it has recalled 5.6 million vehicles in the U.S. over unintended acceleration.
But Toyota’s recall -- while massive -- isn't nearly the largest, so far ranking No. 4 on the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration’s hit parade of top recalls in the agency’s history.
Domestic manufacturers dominate this list, but it’s simply a matter of mathematics: Many of the biggest recalls are from the agency’s earlier years, and import brands at that time simply didn’t sell enough autos in the U.S. for any recalls to cover a large number of vehicles. Now that they do, they are earning places on the list too.
Click on the top for a look at the top 10 recalls in the U.S. of all time.
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/35261471/?pg=11By Dan Carney, contributor
Toyota says it has recalled 5.6 million vehicles in the... more
-