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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



Showing posts with label Toyota software failures. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Toyota software failures. Show all posts

Thursday, June 15, 2017

Toyota is liable for a fatal car crash that sent a driver to prison, appeals court rules







Photo












The idea that a car could accelerate against its driver’s wishes had not yet entered the public consciousness when a Minnesota jury convicted Koua Fong Lee of vehicular homicide in 2007. Lee had been driving his family home from church the previous year when his 1996 Toyota Camry crashed into an Oldsmobile at the end of the ramp, killing one man and two children. 

It wasn’t until the third year of Lee’s eight-year sentence in prison that another fatal crash involving a runaway Toyota, press coverage and a government investigation gave credence to the story Lee had told prosecutors and the jury from the beginning. Lee maintained in his criminal trial that the Camry had suddenly accelerated on its own that day and did not stop when he applied the brakes. 

With Toyota’s subsequent $1.2 billion penalty issued by the Department of Justice over unintended acceleration now in the rearview mirror, the defect is no longer the stain on the company’s reputation it once was. But in civil court, Toyota and its attorneys have continued to battle Lee and the families of those who died in that 2006 crash. On June 9, an appeals court finally issued a ruling in Lee and the families’ favor, upholding a 2015 verdict that Toyota is mostly at fault for the crash due to defects in the Camry related to sudden unintended acceleration. 

“I’m thrilled. I’m really, really happy that this nightmare is over for Koua and his family,” Julie Jonas, legal director for the Innocence Project of Minnesota, tells ConsumerAffairs. Her organization took up Lee’s criminal case while he was in prison, after accidents involving Toyota vehicles and sudden acceleration made news. 

While working on his defense, "I think we heard in total from, gosh, about 40 or 50 drivers who had similar situations with their cars,” Jonas says. The legal team ultimately used testimony from about a dozen of those drivers in his post-conviction hearing, leading a judge to cut Lee’s sentence short and free him from prison in 2010.

Lee and crash victims fought Toyota together in civil court

Lee and his legal team weren’t the only people who had blamed the Camry for Lee's fatal car crash. The family members of those who were hit and killed by Lee’s car later filed a lawsuit against Toyota blaming the car manufacturer for their loved ones’ deaths. After his release from prison, Lee joined the families in their civil suit as a co-plaintiff.
In 2015, a jury ruled in favor of Lee and the families, issuing a verdict that the company was 60 percent liable for the crash and owes the victims a total of $11 million. But Toyota appealed that jury’s decision, sending the case up to the 8th Circuit Court of Appeals, which last week upheld the 2015 verdict.

“We sympathize with everyone affected by this unfortunate accident from 2006,” Toyota’s press team says in a statement to ConsumerAffairs. “While we respect the Eighth Circuit’s decision, we continue to believe the evidence shows that Mr. Lee’s 1996 Camry was well-designed and was not the cause of this accident.”

Questions linger about cars not included in Toyota recall


Photo
The 1996 Camry that Lee drove was not included in Toyota’s massive recall of cars over unintended acceleration. Toyota had initially  blamed faulty floor mats for causing the defect in a 2007 recall.  
In 2010, when the issue gained national attention, Toyota said the problem could also be caused by “sticky” accelerator pedals and took more cars off the market. The manufacturer ultimately recalled over 9 million vehicles for either the floormat or accelerator problem and in 2014 was fined $1.2 billion by the Department of Justice for covering up the defects causing unintended acceleration.

But some experts, attorneys and whistle-blowers have publicly raised concerns that Toyota’s recall and settlement never went far enough in addressing the full causes of runaway cars or the extent of the problem. These critics say that unintended acceleration may in fact be caused by an electronic software glitch, one that isn’t limited to Toyota.

Among the people who are pushing this theory is Betsy Benjaminson, an Israeli translator who was hired through an agency in 2010  to oversee the translation of internal Toyota documents from Japanese to English. Initially oblivious to the sudden acceleration controversy in the United States, Benjaminson slowly pieced together that Toyota’s engineers in Japan were discussing what she says is defective computer software in the vehicles. Benjaminson eventually made the difficult decision to violate her own contract as a translator and leak the internal Toyota documents to the press.

"I worked for about a year and half before they noticed I leaked to CNN,” Benjaminson told ConsumerAffairs in an interview from Israel via Skype earlier this year. That leak lead to a 2012 CNN report which similarly reports that a software glitch had been causing unintended acceleration in Toyotas.  
"The cruise control activates by itself at full throttle when the accelerator pedal position sensor is abnormal," the translated document reportedly says. (CNN says in their story that they hired two translators of their own to verify the translation's accuracy).

Otherwise frustrated with what she viewed as a lack of interest in the mainstream American media, Benjaminson later posted internal company documents on her personal blog, where they remain live today. Toyota tried to force the documents back in the shadows as part of its defense against a growing number of class-action lawsuits in 2014, but Toyota lost interest in enforcing Benjaminson's contract when they learned she had been diagnosed with ALS, a fatal disease, she tells ConsumerAffairs.

In a statement to ConsumerAffairs, Toyota’s press team did not discuss the contents of the documents that Benjaminson had leaked but rather points out that publishing them is a violation of Benjaminson's employment.

“We believe the release of these documents is a clear violation of the translator’s obligations to her employer at the time and Toyota,” Toyota's press team writes to ConsumerAffairs via email. “And, as the MDL Court's December 2014 ruling confirmed, Ms. Benjaminson's possession and dissemination of certain of those documents was also a clear violation of the protective order governing confidential materials in litigation against Toyota.”

“Finally, the safety of Toyota's Electronic Throttle Control System (ETCS) has been repeatedly confirmed by multiple independent evaluations,” Toyota adds.

A 2013 decision over electronics

Trial lawyers, along with mechanical engineers or software experts that sometimes work as expert witnesses for attorneys in car crash cases, have also argued that defective software could explain many sudden acceleration cases.

That legal strategy has had some success. In 2013, a jury sided with plaintiffs in Oklahoma who had alleged that defective software was to blame for a crash in which driver Jean Bookout was behind the wheel of a 2006 Camry. After the jury announced their verdict, but before the jury decided on punitive damages, Toyota agreed to settle with Bookout for a confidential amount.

Don Slavik, a trial lawyer and former engineer, is among the attorneys who continue to represent plaintiffs in personal injury lawsuits against Toyota and other car manufacturers over sudden unintended acceleration. In an interview in January, Slavik told ConsumerAffairs that Toyota "violated their own coding rules," among other problems that could affect the car's electronics.

In the case of Koua Fong Lee’s 1996 Toyota Camry, attorneys representing Lee and the crash victims' relatives focused on the pulleys in the throttle that control the car's accelerator. The attorneys argued that the unintended acceleration in this instance was caused by overheated pulleys, a defect that they said caused the engine to overheat while also jamming the accelerator. 

https://www.consumeraffairs.com/news/toyota-is-liable-for-a-fatal-car-crash-that-sent-a-driver-to-prison-appeals-court-rules-061517.html







Wednesday, April 5, 2017

Toyota: Software to blame for Prius brake problems




brake/accelerator issue
Discussion in 'Gen 3 Prius Care,
Maintenance & Troubleshooting'
started by sat narayan,
March 25, 2017 at 7:32 PM.
(2010 Toyota Prius)
--------------------------------------------
sat narayan
New Member
Joined: Jun 26, 2016
Location: suva fiji
Vehicle: 2010 Prius
Model: I 
when i am turning right at a busy intersection i apply
speed to a stationery prius to move it into the main lane
than once in right lane i apply the brakes to bring
vechile lower the speed but my prius accelerator just
keeps accelerating with engine sound reved up even
when i am applying the brakes... for some reason the
brake is unable to reduce the speed even though my
foot is not on the speed and i can see speedometer
rising when it shud actually be going down....i am in fiji
but i imported this 2nd hand 3rd negeration toyota
prius from japan
can i please get some advise as to what cud be wrong
and what i shud do
sat narayan, March 25, 2017 at 7:32 PM  #1
©2010-2016 XenForo Ltd
------------------------------------------

2010 TOYOTA PRIUS Problems & Complaints  (U.S. NHTSA complaints as of: 25 Mar 2017)

============================

2010 Toyota Prius Recalls

------------------------------------------

2010 Toyota Prius Technical Service Bulletins

============================
Toyota: Software to blame for Prius brake
problems
February 4, 2010 7:04 p.m. EST
(2010 Toyota Prius)
(excerpt):
Toyota officials described the problem as a "disconnect" in the
vehicle's complex anti-lock brake system (ABS) that causes less
than a one-second lag. With the delay, a vehicle going 60 mph will
have traveled nearly another 90 feet before the brakes begin to
take hold.
© 2017 Cable News Network. Turner Broadcasting System, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
============================
[90 FEET WITH NO BRAKES – WHAT’S THE PROBLEM WITH THAT?]
============================







Sunday, September 18, 2016

TOYOTA 4RUNNER dangling out of Downtown Austin parking garage lowered to ground




Vehicle dangling out of Downtown Austin parking garage lowered to ground





by CBS Austin

Friday, September 9th 2016

For just under three hours on Friday afternoon, a running Toyota 4-Runner was dangling alongside a Downtown Austin parking garage near 6th and Congress.
Sometime after 2:30 p.m. the male driver escaped the vehicle. Officials said he climbed to safety without a scratch, only "shaken up."
Witness Zachary Cayson was in the parking garage when it happened and called 911. He said it took only five minutes for the driver to get from his dangling vehicle to inside parking garage.
"I heard him screaming in the car, 'get me out of here,' he wasn't sure what to do. He wasn't hurt or anything, just scared," said Cayson.
YouTube video from Andrew Miller shows the driver climbing out of the vehicle:



Published on Sep 9, 2016
9/9/2016, downtown Austin. A 24 year old man was unable to stop his car and drove off the top of a parking garage in downtown Austin TX. 


Austin Fire Department spoke with the driver. They said he was pulling into a spot at the top of the parking garage when, for whatever reason, he couldn't stop the car. The car drove off the edge but protective cables around the perimeter of the garage got caught in the axel and tires of the SUV. Officials said the car flipped "end over end." The driver had on his seatbelt and was able to climb back inside the garage to safety. 

Karl Schmidt was coming back from a delivery on his bike when he saw the car drive off the edge of the garage.
"The car just came flying off the parking garage, it swung and hit the thing and pieces of the car started falling from the sky. I just heard him screaming for his life," said Schmidt.
Fire officials tethered the car, cut the cable and slowly brought the vehicle back down to the alley way just after 5 p.m.













http://keyetv.com/news/local/vehicle-dangling-out-of-downtown-austin-parking-garage


TOYOTA 4RUNNER dangling from parking garage, many thoughts



Please note: FACEBOOK has been removing these articles for 'VIOLATING COMMUNITY STANDARDS'....HUH? 












1 SUV dangling from parking garage, many thoughts








AUSTIN, Texas — It’s getting only more difficult to decide what qualifies as “news” versus what is just the usual flotsam and jetsam littering our social media streams, soon to be replaced by the next political argument or cute critter.
But when I glance up and notice a car dangling off the ninth floor of a parking garage, leaking gas into the alley below, I still have an innate sense that, yes, this moment might be worth more than a fleeting Instagram photo.
The only time I thought I might glimpse such a thing this summer was in the new Jason Bourne flick that I have yet to see.
But this real-life scene played out Friday. I was on vacation in Austin, the “Live Music Capital of the World.” I was tagging along with my wife on her work trip, where we extended our stay past her conference to explore a capital city that each of us had visited separately years ago.
On this Friday afternoon, I was strolling alone on Congress Avenue, the downtown artery that leads uphill to the majestic 303-foot-tall Capitol where the Legislature convenes biannually.
I glanced east down Sixth Street and noticed a crowd assembled on the sidewalk, plus the flashing red lights of emergency vehicles clogging the street while parked askew behind yellow tape. The crowd itself wouldn’t have looked out of place on Sixth had the hour been a little later, with waves of drunken frat boys on the prowl for cheap booze or exotic flavors of Voodoo Doughnuts, surrounded by the general cacophony of rock and blues bands.
But it turned out that there was a single focal point: a 2004 Toyota 4-Runner hanging from the parking garage. Its 24-year-old driver supposedly had been unable to brake and stop the SUV while parking. So it had burst through the wire barricade, flipped end over end and not plummeted into the alley only because a front wheel snagged on the cable, keeping it aloft.
I had just been walking down the street, minding my own business, and now felt like something of a hapless news magnet even when supposedly off the clock and out of state.
But this is the brain of a journalist, particularly a columnist who feasibly could end up writing about anything: We experience everyday life through a filter. The machinery always whirs in the back of our minds to determine if what we're observing might yield the next idea, trend or character.
I couldn’t help myself. I began snapping photos, shooting live video, talking to people. I met Karl Schmidt, a Jimmy John’s bicycle deliveryman who happened to be rolling through the alley at the precise moment of the accident.
“I heard the sound of the car slamming into the side of the building, and glass and metal fell from the sky," Schmidt said. "So I hit the brakes. Then I heard (the driver) give this blood-curdling scream. … I could see his arms were flailing and moving."
I arrived on the scene after the driver, fortunate that he had been buckled in, crawled out of the car and into the parking garage with the help of other passers-by who had sprinted up the stairs of the parking garage.
“It’s like ‘Jurassic Park,’” Schmidt said, “like where they're dangling, just hanging on by a tiny piece of metal.”
It also was a little spooky: The sight of people in a city’s downtown gazing up at potential disaster couldn’t help but set my mind reeling back to 9/11 on the verge of the somber 15th anniversary weekend. In 2001, I caught wind of the first plane crash into the World Trade Center via Carl Kassell's steady voice on NPR while en route to the Register newsroom in downtown Des Moines. Later that week I stood downtown with neighbors, colleagues, friends, fellow Americans as we gathered to share speeches and prayers.
It helped while in Austin to visit the LBJ Presidential Library and Museum, a beautiful and well-curated 10-story modernist landmark in the middle of the University of Texas campus just north of the Capitol. LBJ’s ‘60s tenure in the White House saw the historic tumult of the Cold War, civil rights, Vietnam and of course the JFK assassination. Soaking in the vivid multimedia of all those flash points, from the perspective of our nation having endured the chaos, felt like just what I needed.
Even if we keep falling short, at least we keep crawling forward.
I first traveled to Austin annually in the '90s on behalf of the Register as a music critic attending the South By Southwest (SXSW) music festival to scout new bands when the music industry still was living off the fat of the CD era. The Lone Star capital 15 years later in some ways was hard to recognize, its downtown skyline now a pincushion full of high-rise condos — including a 58-story giant Jenga set under construction that will be the tallest residential tower west of the Mississippi River.
This historically had been a city that carefully guarded its views of the Capitol dome, where the only height that’s really supposed to matter is the few feet that musicians climb to get on stage. At classic honky-tonk dive the Broken Spoke, for instance, musicians’ coiffed hair nearly brushes the sagging ceiling as they strum and sing.
The mantra in the Texas capital these days is “Keep Austin Weird,” a city afraid of losing the distinct flavor that made it famous. I sort of feel like Des Moines is at the stage where we’re just getting weird, just taking on more of a signature character that some day we can complain bitterly that we've lost.
Thus one dangling SUV turned into a jumbled metaphor for my journalist brain that apparently finds it hard to relax.
When I realized that the vehicle wasn't going to crash into the alley below but be lowered safely inch by inch, I stopped littering my Facebook friends' feeds with the live video and moved on down the street to the next honky tonk.

There is a BIG hidden secret in the auto industry...it's called ELECTRONIC sudden unintended acceleration! I know...you thought that was just about FLOOR MATS and sticky pedals, or "driver error," right? That's certainly what TOYOTA would like you to continue to believe, BUT DON'T!

These ultra-complex new engines are completely computer driven. Software is needed to control the throttle system. You THINK you are giving gas when you press the accelerator, but you are only SUGGESTING this to the computer. In electronic SUA cases, the throttle software may be glitch-prone and NOT do as you wish.

What happens then? Well, the glitch may (and has for countless SUA victims) result in an OPEN THROTTLE situation. The brakes become INEFFECTIVE in these situations and crashes into storefronts, buildings, and homes have resulted.

What does the automaker say? They hook the vehicles up to the computer and declare NOTHING WRONG! They cite the EDR which has erroneous data and say YOU were NOT braking. They point the finger at you based on AGE, GENDER, MEDICAL history, prescription meds, etc. YOU name it, they've TRIED it!

Get the picture? And you THOUGHT the GM issue was big? Think again! This cover-up of ELECTRONIC SUA is scandalous and very well-orchestrated.

Why even a WHI
STLEBLOWER has been legally harassed by Toyota as it does NOT want her Toyota internal docs posted online anymore. The automaker wants to intimidate and SILENCE her. It doesn't want the PUBLIC involved, for goodness sake!

Charlene McCarthy Blake
Brett Lorenzen
There's also a plethora of idiots texting and half-driving, who make stupid mistakes. If you are afraid of computers, put the Internet down and back away slowly.
LikeReply2Sep 15, 2016 9:16am



Charlene McCarthy Blake
Brett Lorenzen That isn't what happened here. Far from it. The throttle control software is not strictly regulated as in the airline industry. Experts have uncovered serious flaws in the Toyota embedded software that can lead to a deadly TAKE OFF. With some of the push button ignition Toyota vehicles, it takes too long to turn the vehicle off. The unintended acceleration episode can be just seconds in duration with a horrific crash at the end. Toyota owners have every reason to be concerned; some currently first hand what can occur!
LikeReplySep 15, 2016 1:02pm
Charlene McCarthy Blake
Let's distinguish between "driver error" and "driver TERROR," shall we? One is a mistake made by the driver that results in a fender bender or accident otherwise. The other is the experience of being catapulted forward at rapid speed in just a few seconds time and with increased force due to an ELECTRONIC anomaly than has been to date identified by several experts in the field! Drivers in "driver TERROR" have NO control over the throttle and an essentially ineffective braking system as a consequence of the sheer power of this DEADLY scenario!



Charlene McCarthy Blake
According to NASA expert, Dr. Henning Leidecker, some Toyota's can grow "tin whiskers" within certain electronic components. This can result in short circuits which can lead to yet another type of electronically-induced SUA event. Dr. Leidecker and associates actually DID FIND and study a case of "tin whiskers" found within the accelerator pedal assembly; rendering a Toyota vehicle UNDRIVEABLE.

Dr. Leidecker suggests driving the affected Toyota vehicles is "a game of Russian roulette." Dr. Leidecker is most concerned about 2002-2006 Toyota Camrys with their potential to grow "tin whiskers." H...See More
Charlene McCarthy Blake
Singer/songwriter, Kris Kitko did an AWESOME job on her YouTube video, "Toyota Where Are Ya?" The video was directed at Toyota regarding her own real world experience with Toyota SUA, sudden unintended acceleration. With her satirical approach, she completely destroyed the Toyota and NHTSA myth about SUA, namely “pedal misapplication” by drivers. Unfortunately, Kris Kitko’s YouTube video is no longer available for viewing online.

In the wake of the NHTSA/DOJ $1.2 BILLION settlement following a CRIMINAL investigation, Kris should be encouraged to use her finely-honed musical 
skills to do a sequel to her first Toyota SUA YouTube video. The U.S. Federal Government allowed Toyota “deferred prosecution” in this settlement provided it follow the steps outlined in the terms of the agreement. No one…not one single Toyota executive…is going to serve any prison time for knowingly withholding evidence that could have saved many lives and ensured public safety on the roads.Toyota ADMITTED that it LIED to both the Toyota customers and the government.

Michael Barr, renowned embedded systems expert, after studying Toyota’s ETCS-I far longer than NASA did, found the existence of faults in the software which could lead to a real-world, potentially-catastrophic SUA event with a number of potentially ineffective failsafes. Imagine flying down the road in a Toyota with no functioning brake override to exit a software task-death! Isn’t that a bit like being on a high-speed roller coaster and having the track fail to keep you on? And want to know the most SHOCKING part? Toyota reportedly didn't have a copy of the code in their OWN monitor chip! Michael Barr and company had to SHOW them! Can we just say, “Scary!”

Toyota cites that there is no electronic cause for SUA in its vehicles based on the short-duration investigations by NHTSA and NASA. Michael Barr and other experts have shown these studies to be scientifically seriously flawed. First, the ETCS-I software investigation was extremely limited. Only a SMALL FRACTION of the embedded software was 
tested by NASA.


Secondly, Toyota misrepresented the presence of EDAC RAM (error detection and correction random access memory) while indications of this issue were apparently redacted in the original NHTSA report. This misled NASA into NOT LOOKING INTO a number of potential sources of failure – which they may otherwise might have.

Charlene McCarthy Blake