Feds checking on possible unintended acceleration car crash
Updated 10:06 pm, Monday, January 4, 2016
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ONTARIO, Calif. (AP) — Federal transportation safety officials have taken an interest in a New Year's Eve crash near Los Angeles in which a driver of a Toyota Yaris said the car began to accelerate uncontrollably before smashing into another car.
Five people died in the collision.
Gordon Trowbridge, a spokesman for the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, says the agency's special crash investigations team will join accident specialists from the California Highway Patrol when they inspect the Yaris.
CHP Officer Christina Wood said all possible factors will be scrutinized, including a stuck accelerator. She said the CHP already has ruled out drunk driving.
Several years ago, Toyota and its Lexus luxury brand vehicles were plagued by complaints of unwanted acceleration as well as investigations, recalls and lawsuits.
Five killed, including 7-year-old boy, after out-of-control car veers off 10 Freeway
Kate Mather and Anh Do
Four adults and a 7-year-old boy were killed Thursday in Ontario after an out-of-control car drove off the 10 Freeway and hit another vehicle near an exit ramp, officials said.
Michael Pineda, a boy who was riding in the out-of-control Toyota Yaris, died in a nearby emergency room, the San Bernardino Sheriff's Department said Friday.
All four people in the other vehicle, a Toyota Solara, died at the scene, authorities said. They were identified as: Matthew Pusateri, 29, of Mission Viejo; Anthony Flores, 30, of Hemet; Jeffrey Willey, 29, of Huntington Beach; and Monica Flores, 37, of Arcadia.
The crash occurred shortly after 7 p.m. Thursday, sheriff's officials said, after the Yaris "began to accelerate uncontrollably" while driving east on the 10 Freeway.
The driver, "unable to stop or slow the car," drove off the freeway at the Vineyard Avenue exit, the sheriff's department said. It then struck the second car, a sedan driving north on Vineyard.
The California Highway Patrol is investigating the crash.
CHP Officer Christina Wood said Friday that investigators do not believe the 51-year-old woman driving the Yaris was under the influence of alcohol or drugs. The driver, Wood added, was “fully cooperating” with investigators.
The driver, along with a 16-year-old boy and 12-year-old girl who were passengers, were still at Loma Linda University Medical Center on Friday, Wood said, where they were being treated for their injuries.
Wood said the driver was related to the 7-year-old boy who was killed in the crash, but did not specify how.
The two people sitting in the front of the Solara were wearing their seatbelts, Wood said. Investigators have not been able to determine whether the two people in the backseat were, she said, because of the damage to the vehicle.
Times staff writer Soumya Karlamangla contributed to this report.
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