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Middleboro Review 2

NEW CONTENT MOVED TO MIDDLEBORO REVIEW 2

Toyota

Since the Dilly, Dally, Delay & Stall Law Firms are adding their billable hours, the Toyota U.S.A. and Route 44 Toyota posts have been separated here:

Route 44 Toyota Sold Me A Lemon



Wednesday, January 23, 2013

Toyota: Don't Believe It!

Toyota has settled another fatal Sudden Unintended Acceleration crash that killed two people for an 'undisclosed amount,' meaning there is a Gag Order attached.

Notice that they dragged it out for two years, causing the families anguish, settling a month before trial.

Deny! Deny! Deny!  Instead of fixing the problem.

Check these out:
Toyota Table of Contents

My Toyota sits on the property of Route 44 Toyota while everyone pretends NO BRAKES don't exist.

The BRAKE FAILURE was demonstrated to the Route 44 Toyota technician sitting in the passenger seat - NO BRAKES!

How do you drive a Toyota with NO BRAKES????



Toyota warned U.S. dealerships in 2002 that Camry owners complained of throttle surges and recommended adjusting the computer, documents indicted. [sic]
"If you look at this document, it says electronics," attorney Clarence Ditlow said. "It says the fix is reprogrammed in the computer. It doesn't say anything about floor mats."

....repair bulletin proves the manufacturer misled the public about the causes of sudden acceleration.


Toyota knew:

The early Toyota investigation showed the problems and the luck associated with SUA investigations. NHTSA randomly two vehicles that repeatedly demonstrated SUA. NHTSA knew the problem was in the cruise control computer because if they moved the computer from

the bad Toyota that had SUA to a good Toyota that did not have SUA, the good Toyota developed SUA. When NHTSA tested the vehicles at VRTC, it could not find a failure mode.

3 Ultimately, NHTSA gave the computers to Toyota to take to Japan and test. Although Toyota found a failure mode in the printed circuit board, details of the findings were kept confidential.
From: Toyota: ...biggest and most deadly corporate cover up of all times...



Toyota settlement in wrongful-death case may be best legal move, observers say


By Associated Press, January 17, 2013
 
LOS ANGELES — As Toyota Motor Corp. chips away at settling lawsuits claiming its vehicles suddenly accelerate, the question remains whether attorneys who sued could prove to a jury there was a design flaw.

Toyota is sticking to its propaganda --

The company maintains stuck accelerator pedals, faulty floor mats and driver error are the reasons for vehicles unexpectedly surging, while plaintiffs’ attorneys contend Toyota’s electronic throttle control system is to blame.

Recent settlements totaling more than $1 billion by Toyota to resolve numerous lawsuits involving economic loss and a few involving wrongful death claims may signal that the automaker doesn’t want to risk coming out on the losing end of a potentially costly court decision.

“A bad loss in a jury trial would inflict lasting damage to Toyota in loss of public confidence,” said Los Angeles-based attorney Christine Spagnoli, who has won several multimillion-dollar verdicts against automakers over safety defects. “I believe Toyota will continue to look for better opportunities to get a win.”



The company said Thursday it settled a lawsuit with the family of two people killed in a Utah crash that was set to go to trial next month and serve as a test case for hundreds of others that are pending.

Terms of the agreement weren’t released, but it comes just weeks after Toyota agreed to pay more than $1 billion to settle lawsuits where vehicle owners said the value of their cars and SUVs plummeted after the company recalled millions of vehicles because of sudden-acceleration issues.

In the Utah case, Paul Van Alfen and his son’s fiancee, Charlene Jones Lloyd, were killed when their Camry slammed into a wall near Wendover, Utah. in 2010. The Utah Highway Patrol concluded based on statements from witnesses and the crash survivors that the gas pedal was stuck.

It was the first so-called “bellwether” case, before a federal judge in Orange County, Calif., chosen to help predict the potential outcome of other lawsuits making similar allegations.

Wayne Mason, a product liability attorney in Dallas, doesn’t believe Thursday’s settlement portends poorly for either side going forward.



“This is like taking an aspirin when you have a migraine,” Mason said. “Each of these cases has to be weighed on their own merit. I will be surprised if some don’t get tried.”

Toyota continues to be dogged by sudden-acceleration issues that arose four years ago. Last month the U.S. government hit the company with a record $17.4 million fine for failing again to quickly report problems to federal regulators and for delaying a safety recall. More than 150,000 2010 Lexus Rx 350s and RX 450h models were recalled because the driver’s-side floor mats can trap the gas pedal and cause the vehicles to speed up without warning.



Toyota has recalled more than 14 million vehicles globally to fix sticky gas pedals and floor mats.

The company also paid a total of $48.8 million in fines for three violations in 2010.

While the recalls have soiled the company’s sterling reputation for reliability, Toyota has regained its position as the world’s largest automaker and saw sales increase 27 percent last year.
 
The automaker also has received some vindication Both the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration and NASA were unable to find any defects in Toyota’s source code that could cause acceleration problems.


In 2011, a federal judge found that Toyota wasn’t liable for a 2005 crash involving a Scion that the driver blamed on the electronic throttle or a floor mat.


Because the data recorders can lose their information if disconnected from the car’s battery or if the battery dies—as could happen after a crash—the agency is focusing only on recent accidents, said a person familiar with the situation.


NHTSA has received more than 3,000 complaints of sudden acceleration in Toyotas and Lexuses, including some dating to early last decade, according to a report the agency compiled in March. The incidents include 75 fatal crashes involving 93 deaths.


http://www.vosizneias.com/60054/2010/07/14/washington-report-suggests-driver-error-in-toyota-crashes/

A second bellwether trial is slated for later this year, but it’s unclear if a resolution will be made before then. Plaintiffs’ attorneys have reviewed thousands of internal Toyota documents, reviewed data and deposed employees, but most of that material has been kept under seal in court records.

In a statement announcing the Van Alfen settlement, Toyota said there will be a number of other chances to defend itself in a court of law, although the company may “decide from time to time” to settle select cases.

“It would seem that Toyota did not want a public airing of the evidence that has been gathered in the lawsuits, so that it can continue to say that there is not a problem,” Spagnoli said. “If Toyota felt it could have successfully defended its products in these cases, it would have welcomed a public trial.”


http://articles.washingtonpost.com/2013-01-17/business/36409995_1_accelerator-pedals-rx-450h-floor-mats

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