Lieff
Cabraser is
a national personal injury law firm that represents drivers and passengers injured
in car crashes, pickup truck, SUV and Yamaha
Rhino rollover accidents.
Mitchell
Johnson was antsy, bored and feeling like he
wanted to be just about anywhere but watching
his little brother's school musical program.
He'd seen the program once already, and being
a typical 11-year-old, he just couldn't make
it to the end.
Wanting to stretch his
legs, Mitchell asked his mom if he could grab his basketball out of the car.
Once inside the family's 1998 Buick Regal, Mitchell apparently turned on the
car radio and started eating sunflower seeds.
But as he leaned out the
front driver's side window -- possibly to spit out a sunflower seed shell --
Mitchell apparently hit the power window switch. The window quickly rose, and
within seconds it was closing around Mitchell's neck. More...
October 8, 2003
The
Wall Street Journal, "New Rollover
Test Could Lead to Safer SUVs"
How
likely is your SUV to roll over in traffic? After
decades of research and bitter debate, the federal
government unveiled a new test Tuesday that may
provide the answer. The test is the first to
be based on a vehicle's actual performance, instead
of a mathematical formula. It is expected to
increase pressure on car makers to speed up technological
changes that are intended to reduce rollover
accidents.
Starting this year, the
government will subject all vehicles to the new road test -- a series of sharp
maneuvers at high speeds. Consumers could start seeing the new ratings by year
end, when the government will begin factoring the results of the test into its
traditional rating system. The agency plans to post the first batch of its new
ratings (probably for a dozen cars or so) on the Web site safercars.gov1 by January
at the latest. It won't require manufacturers or dealers to provide the data
to customers at the time of sale.
The new test is the first
in a series of actions that are likely to refocus public attention on the safety
of sport-utility vehicles and light trucks. Within the next month, a panel of
auto- and insurance-industry officials is expected to announce an agreement on
new design criteria for SUVs and light trucks intended to reduce deaths and injuries
that occur when these bigger, heavier vehicles strike smaller passenger cars.
October 7, 2003
Reuters, "NHTSA
to begin actual driving tests of vehicles,
but doubts remain"
The
U.S. government for the first time will begin
road tests Tuesday to measure vehicle rollover
risk, but consumer and safety groups are not
convinced the program will yield the most useful
safety information.
Congress ordered
the agency to rate passenger vehicles for rollover risk after the deadly Firestone
tire debacle that led to the recall of millions of tires in 2000 and 2001. Nearly
300 people were killed in deadly crashes, many of them rollovers, linked to Firestone
tire blowouts.
October 14, 2003
The
Recorder, "Power window accidents
causing auto industry headaches"
In
the fall of 2001, cattle auctioneer Jay Gates
drove with his 2-year-old daughter, Zoie, to
his sale barn where he helped unload a truck
full of animals in Anthony, Kan.
Gates thought the safest
place to leave Zoie would be in the back seat of his 2000 Ford pickup, next to
where he was working. The driver of the cattle truck noticed her leaning out
a window and talking to a dog. Then he looked away. She must have kneeled on
the power window switch. The window rolled up and caught her throat, suffocating
her.
Power windows kill about
four Americans a year and injure 500, according to the National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration and Janette Fennell, president of Kids and Cars, a child-safety
advocacy group.
American automakers
are starting to follow the European lead by installing safety devices to prevent
these kinds of injuries. In the meantime, most cars have windows that don't stop
when they encounter an object, and that rise with considerable force. Kids and
Cars has produced a video of a window neatly slicing a head of cabbage in half.
October 7, 2003
Reuters, "NHTSA
to begin actual driving tests of vehicles,
but doubts remain"
The
US government for the first time will begin road
tests Tuesday to measure vehicle rollover risk,
but consumer and safety groups are not convinced
the program will yield the most useful safety
information.
Congress ordered the agency
to rate passenger vehicles for rollover risk after the deadly Firestone tire
debacle that led to the recall of millions of tires in 2000 and 2001. Nearly
300 people were killed in deadly crashes, many of them rollovers, linked to Firestone
tire blowouts.
There are 22 million sport/utility
vehicles on US roads, or about 10 percent of the total number of vehicles. NHTSA
released figures this summer showing the number of SUV rollover deaths rose 14
percent in 2002 to more than 2,400.
Promising
technologies are emerging, or exist, to make
vehicles safer for children. Consumers Union
is pressing the auto industry, Congress, and
the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration
to give serious consideration to them in three
particular areas. More...
October 1, 2003
Los
Angeles Times, "Making power windows
safer"
It's
been two years since Damien Anthony, 15, was
found dead, his body hanging out of a 1986 Ford
Merkur. The Oklahoma teenager was killed when
he was entrapped by the power window on the driver's
side of the car. Damien was washing the car at
his parents' home when he leaned in through the
open window and inadvertently touched a power
window switch. With his neck and arm caught by
the window, Damien was unable to reach the switch
to free himself, according to attorneys for the
Anthony family, who sued Ford Motor Co. By the
time his father reached him, the boy was dead.
The notion that someone
could be killed by a power window "never would have entered my mind," John
Anthony said. Over the last couple of decades, there have been 58 fatalities
and hundreds of injuries in the United States because of power windows, safety
groups say.
Concerned about the number
of deaths and accidents, Kids and Cars, the Center for Auto Safety and the Consumer
Federation of America have petitioned the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration
to require automakers to provide safer electric window switches. The groups are
particularly concerned about rocker, or toggle-style, window switches, which
are triggered easily by children and close in a hurry. Consumer advocates want
automakers to install safety devices so that power windows automatically reverse
direction if they come in contact with anything, in addition to installing switches
that cannot be triggered unintentionally.
Mansfield
resident Rebecca Hergatt spoke at the National
Press Club last month in Washington, D.C., before
a room full of journalists. Hergatt's son Mac,
5, survived a near-fatal accident June 13 when
he put his head out a window of the family's
1992 Buick Regal. Unaware of the child's actions,
Hergatt put up the power windows of the car while
parked in the driveway of their Pavonia West
Road residence.
Hergatt sought answers
from automakers after the accident, but had little success. Through the Internet
she found Kids and Cars, a nonprofit organization dedicated to preventing child
injuries and death from non-traffic vehicular incidents. The organization has
documented 23 deaths from power windows since 1993. More...
After
17 years in sales and marketing for Kodak and
personal care product-maker Helene Curtis, Janette
Fennell knows how to sell. But she says she was
a babe in the woods when she started trying to
sell her brand of safety to Detroit automakers
in the late '90s. More...
August 11, 2003
Associated
Press, "Runge brings medical experience
to top auto safety job"
One
Saturday many years ago, while working in an
emergency room, Dr. Jeffrey Runge had to tell
parents that their two children died in an auto
accident because they were not wearing seat belts.
The next week, Runge treated two teenagers saved
by seat belts when their vehicle plunged 30 feet
into a construction pit. Auto safety became a
second calling for Runge, now head of the National
Highway Traffic Safety Administration. "Every
day is graduate school," Runge says, whether
he is pushing for increased seat belt use or
venting about the highway fatality rate: 42,815
deaths in 2002, or 117 per day.
Runge has formed teams
to focus on five priorities: increasing seat belt use, decreasing impaired driving,
improving data collected on accidents and defects, preventing rollovers and reducing
the amount of damage to small vehicles when they are hit by larger ones.
August 8, 2003
Reuters, "Ford
recalls over 1M SUVs: Company recalling Ford
Explorers and Mercury Mountaineers to fix speed
control and seat recliners"
Ford
Motor Co. said Friday it is recalling more than
a million Ford Explorer and Mercury Mountaineer
sport/utility vehicles to fix problems with the
vehicles' speed control and seat recliners. Ford
said the cruise control fix affects 499,988 trucks
for 1999 through 2001 model year Ford Explorers,
Explorer Sports and Mercury Mountaineers, and
2001 Explorer Sport Tracs, all equipped with
4.0 liter V-6 engines and speed control.
It said some customers
had complained that the speed control would not shut off, due to a failing control
cable.
The other recall involves
about 1.6 million 1998 through 2001 model year Explorers and Mountaineers, and
2001-2002 Explorer Sports and Sport Tracs with high-back seats. Ford said it
is possible for a bolt on the driver's seat to fracture, causing the seat to
recline unexpectedly. Ford said no accidents or injuries were attributed to either
problem. Both will be repaired free of charge.
August 7, 2003
USA
Today, "Vehicle
stability control gets cool reception in USA"
What
if there were a way of preventing vehicle rollovers,
but no one knew about it? That's not far from
the situation facing auto suppliers who make
stability control systems, which sense when drivers
are about to lose control of their vehicles and
help them regain it.
By preventing spinouts
and other mishaps, stability control could reduce single-vehicle crashes by up
to 35%, studies in Europe and Japan show.
July 30, 2003
Los
Angeles Times, "NHTSA Upgrades Probe
of Ford Sedans"
Ford
Motor Co.'s Crown Victoria sedans and similar
Lincoln and Mercury vehicles from the 1995 through
1997 model years face an upgraded US investigation
of rear brake failures that may result in a recall.
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration
started an engineering analysis that covers at
least 785,000 cars, including the Lincoln Town
Car and Mercury Grand Marquis. The agency received
reports of more than 700 complaints and warranty
repairs for brake-line leaks that can extend
stopping distances. The agency also said it began
an investigation of Volkswagen's Audi A6 sedan
after three reports that the dashboard caught
fire without warning, leading to a crash in each
case. The inquiry involves 56,740 cars from the
1999 and 2000 model years.
July 22, 2003
Los
Angeles Times, "Alleged Defect in
Dodge Durango Investigated"
The
government is investigating an alleged defect
on the Dodge Durango that has led some drivers
to lose control of their vehicles, documents
showed.
The National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration said four drivers have reported the failure of an upper
ball joint on the Durango's front suspension. In two of those cases, the front
wheels separated from the Durango.
In the other two cases,
the front suspension collapsed. All four drivers lost control of their vehicles,
although no injuries were reported.
NHTSA is investigating
Durangos from model years 1998 through 2003. The agency will seek more information
from DaimlerChrysler before deciding whether to upgrade the investigation.
July 19, 2003
International
Herald Tribune, "Rollover Accidents
are Cited in a Rise in US Road Deaths"
New
US traffic statistics show that rollover accidents
were the leading contributor to an increase in
the number of deaths on the nation's roads last
year.
A total of 42,815
people died in traffic accidents in the United States last year, the most since
1990, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration said Thursday. The agency
said a large proportion of the increase was a result of rollover accidents.
July 18, 2003
Reuters, "Fatal
SUV rollovers jump 14 percent"
The
number of people killed in sport/ utility rollover
crashes jumped 14 percent last year as total
highway deaths hit a 12-year high.
Car crash injuries
fell to an all-time low last year, but SUV rollovers killed more than 2,400 people,
a 14% increase from 2001. Nearly two-thirds, or 61 percent, of all SUV fatalities
involved rollovers.
July 14, 2003
California
Governor Davis Signs Bill Aimed At Curbing
Discriminatory Auto Loan Mark Ups
Governor
Gray Davis of California signed into law a bill
to curb inflated interest rates on auto loans
that car dealers charge minority customers. The
new statute is the nation's first to take aim
at discriminatory lending that can result from
a practice known as the dealer markup. Frequently
the customers that incur the highest mark ups
are allegedly African Americans and Latinos.
June 11, 2003
Associated
Press, "Lawsuit filed in fatal Lincoln
crash"
The
children of a woman killed three years ago when
a dump truck slammed into her car at a fast-food
drive-through have sued the truck's manufacturer
in Lincoln, Nebraska. Dennis G. and Cheryl Carlson
allege in US District Court that defective brakes
on the dump truck led to the accident. They and
four of their siblings were seeking unspecified
damages from Freightliner LLC of Portland, Ore.
Their mother, Shirley
Carlson, 67, was one of two people killed in the accident. The fully loaded truck
careened out of control on Oct. 19, 2000 and collided with a car before crashing
into the rear of Carlson's car in the drive-through lane of a Burger King restaurant.
The driver of the first car, Melissa Holton, 18, also died from injuries she
suffered in the crash. After the accident, Freightliner voluntarily recalled
133,000 trucks with brake pins similar to one thought to have failed in the crash.
June 2, 2003
USA
Today, "Car safety experts push
for new stability device"
The
National Transportation Safety Board will hear
evidence Tuesday that a promising auto safety
feature might have prevented a sport-utility
vehicle rollover crash in Maryland that killed
five people.
NTSB crash investigators
will recommend that the board encourage widespread installation of the device
- called stability control - in new cars and trucks.
The system senses when
a driver is about to lose control of a vehicle, and it applies brakes to certain
wheels. That helps the driver maintain or regain control.
May 20, 2003
USA
Today, "SUVs fare poorly in latest
government rollover tests"
Sport-utility
vehicles performed poorly in the latest round
of rollover tests released Tuesday, with none
winning the government's highest safety rating.
The National Highway
Traffic Safety Administration released rollover ratings for 14 sport-utility
vehicles from the 2003 model year. Most got three out of five stars from the
agency. None got a four- or five-star rollover rating.
That shows little
improvement from the 2001 model year, when the Pontiac Aztek was the first SUV
to win a four-star rollover rating from NHTSA. In 2002, the Aztek and the Acura
MDX earned four stars.
May 19, 2003
Reuters, "Court
Sets Aside Record Award vs. Ford"
The
US Supreme Court gave Ford Motor Co. (NYSE:F
- News) a victory on Monday and set aside a record
$290 million punitive damages award against it
over a deadly 1993 California rollover accident
with a Ford Bronco. Ford had called this the
largest personal injury award that had been affirmed
on appeal in US history. The high court set aside
the California court ruling that upheld the award.
The justices sent the case back
to the state court for further consideration in view of their ruling last month
in a different case that punitive damages must be reasonable and proportionate
to the harm suffered. The Supreme Court also granted another Ford appeal over
a $15 million punitive damages award in a Kentucky case brought on behalf of
a man killed in 1993 when his Ford pickup truck slipped into reverse from park
and he was crushed.
May 7, 2003
Los
Angeles Times, "GM Paid $495 Million
in Suits: The automaker settled 297 cases
involving fiery pickup crashes, a court document
reveals"
General
Motors Corp. has paid out at least $495 million an
average of more than $1.6 million per case to
settle a series of lawsuits brought by victims
of fiery crashes involving a popular line of
pickup trucks. The revelation of the payouts
emerged late Tuesday, when a federal judge in
Missoula, Mont., released an exhibit in a case
brought by the estate of a family killed in a
pickup accident.
The cases involved C/K
pickups that had fuel tanks mounted outside the vehicles' protective frames.
That made them prone to explode in crashes, critics say. The dollar amounts in
the document refer only to settlements reached before late 2000. It isn't clear
how much GM has shelled out since then, though C/K pickup cases have been dwindling
steadily as the trucks age and drivers replace.
April 24, 2003
Los
Angeles Times, "States Say SUV Ads
May Be Misleading"
Eight
state attorneys general sent letters to 16 automakers
warning that advertisements portraying sport
utility vehicles as handling like cars may be
misleading.
"Too many ads have
SUVs zipping around like sports cars, which they are not," Illinois Atty.
Gen. Lisa Madigan said.
The warning comes
after Ford Motor Co.'s $51.5-million settlement in December of consumer fraud
claims, involving fatal rollovers of Explorers, brought by the 50 states, the
District of Columbia and Puerto Rico.
The letters on behalf of
40 states and territories went to Ford, General Motors Corp., Toyota Motor Corp.,
Honda Motor Co., DaimlerChrysler and other automakers.
April 16, 2003
Associated
Press, "Car's Electric Window Kills
Boy"
An
11-year-old boy who left a music program at an
elementary school to play in the parking lot
was found dead, trapped between a car's electric
window and the door frame. Mitchell L. Johnson
was attending his brother's fourth-grade class
presentation at Danville South Elementary in
Indiana when he became bored and left with keys
to his mother's car.
Police said his family
found him dead after the program concluded Tuesday evening. "We believe
he may have somehow pushed the button and the window came up and trapped his
head,'' police Lt. Jerry Cunningham said. The coroner said the death was an accidental
suffocation and police said there were no signs of foul play.
April 1, 2003
Money
Magazine, "Sit. Rollover. Heel.;
How to have your SUV and be safe too"
It's
the biggest disconnect in the automotive world.
As millions of consumers clamor for an ever-growing
SUV lineup, regulators, politicians and pundits
savage the same vehicles for their fuel-thirsty
ways and purported safety risks -- particularly
their vulnerability to rollovers.
By saying last month that
he wouldn't put his own children in some SUV models, Dr. Jeffrey Runge, head
of the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration and the nation's top auto
regulator, only fanned the flames that were started during the Ford Explorer/Firestone
blowout scandal.
April 1, 2003
Monterey
County Herald, "Three women killed
in accident"
They
were just five miles from the end of a trip they
had made before, a religious pilgrimage to the
Southern California desert. But the crash of
their van ended the trip and the lives of three
young Monterey County women along with two others
from Northern California's small Coptic Orthodox
community.
Today, the Monterey congregation
will mourn the deaths of Dalal and Iman Hanalla, sisters who lived in the Los
Laureles area between Monterey and Salinas, and Monterey resident Simone Botros.
Dalal Hanalla was 25, her sister a year younger. Botros was just 21. The local
women and two others were killed when the church van overturned early Saturday
as it approached the St. Anthony Monastery in the Mojave Desert community of
Yermo. Also killed in the accident were Christine Youssef, 17, of San Jose, who
died at the scene, and Mary Demian, 21, of Fair Oaks, who died en route to a
hospital.
The van, driven by Peter
Demian, 27, of San Jose -- no relation to Mary Demian -- was one of three in
a convoy bound for the monastery, the California Highway Patrol said. The driver
suffered major head injuries and several other passengers suffered serious injuries.
The 2002 Ford 15-passenger van was northbound on Interstate 15 at 70 mph when
it began to drift toward a vehicle in the next lane at a section of the freeway
with a slight bend, CHP investigators reported.
The driver swerved several
times while trying to straighten out, sending the van out of control, the highway
patrol said.
March 31, 2003
Sacramento
Bee, "Lenten retreat turns to tragedy"
As
their three vans hurtled toward Barstow early
Saturday morning, about 40 Northern California
teens and young adults were looking forward to
their annual Lenten retreat of prayer and rest.
What happened just before 3 a.m. left the group
in spiritual need more than ever. One of the
vans swerved off Interstate 15 and rolled over,
killing five young women just 20 minutes from
their destination, the St. Anthony Monastery,
the country's only Coptic Orthodox monastery.
Raymond Souweha, 23, of
San Jose said Sunday he was the only one of the van's 14 occupants to survive
without serious injury, only a bruised and cut face that required stitches. "All
of us were screaming and yelling," Souweha said. "It's very, very tragic."
Souweha said Peter Demian,
27, of Mountain View, had been driving the entire seven-hour trip, although he
had taken breaks. Just before the crash, Demian dozed off. Many of his passengers
were already asleep, but one realized the van was sliding from its lane and called
out Demian's name. Startled awake, Demian jerked the steering wheel, but his
van swerved out of control, onto the shoulder and down a gradual slope, Souweha
said. The travelers were members of a half dozen Northern California Coptic churches
and gathered at a church in Hayward to load the vans.
March 27, 2003
Portland
Press Herald (Maine), "Snowe backs
rollover tests for large vans"
Fifteen-passenger
vans, like the one that rolled off a bridge over
the Allagash Wilderness Waterway in September,
killing 14 people, need more rigorous safety
testing, US Sen. Olympia Snowe said on Wednesday.
So Maine's senior senator
introduced legislation to require more testing and to close a loophole that she
said "put schoolchildren at risk."
"Since 1990, more
than 400 people have lost their lives in van rollover accidents, and hundreds
more have been seriously injured," Snowe, a member of the Senate Commerce
Subcommittee on Surface Transportation, said in a written statement. "Fifteen-passenger
vans are popular vehicles for tourists, schoolchildren and church outings, but
they can also be dangerous if overloaded with either passengers or cargo."
March 12, 2003
Motor
Trend, "Automakers Must Call
a Recall a Recall"
Many
2002 Nissan Altimas had a potentially faulty
air bag sensor; a half-million 1995-97 Ford Contours
and Mercury Mystiques had heaters that could
cause fires; thousands of 1998-99 Honda and Isuzu
sport-utility vehicles had anti-lock brakes that
could take too long to stop.
The manufacturers fixed
the vehicles, yet none was technically recalled. That's because these automakers
-- and many others -- were able to negotiate a special deal with regulators called
a "safety improvement campaign" that allowed them to couch their recalls
in less dramatic language.
Now, National Highway
Transportation Safety Administration chief Jeffrey Runge has done away with safety
improvement campaigns. Automakers will no longer be able to say they didn't do
a "recall" when they call back vehicles to fix safety problems.
March 11, 2003
USA
Today, "Ford Faces Challenge on
Bronco rollovers"
An
environmental group with clout is trying to portray
Ford Motor - and by implication, most automakers
- as lying about safety, hoping to destroy the
industry's credibility when it argues that stricter
fuel-economy standards would lead to less-safe
vehicles.
Detroit defends the poor
fuel economy of SUVs by contending that's the price of safer vehicles, and argues
that "increased fuel economy will force it to make small, unsafe cars. We
wanted to see how concerned the big seller of SUVs, Ford, was about safety," says
Ken Cook, president of Environmental Working Group (EWG).
Ford has been beset by
criticism that's hurting its stock and boosting borrowing costs.
March 11, 2003
United
Press International, "Watchdog
group: Ford hid rollover data"
An
environmental group wants federal auto safety
officials to reopen an investigation into rollovers
of Ford Bronco II sport-utility vehicles. Ford
ceased production of the boxy Bronco II in 1990
when it was replaced by the Explorer, the world's
best-selling SUV for the last 12 years.
The Washington-based Environmental
Working Group said Ford paid an expert witness $5 million over eight years to
change his testimony on the vehicle's rollover risk. The watchdog group claimed
in a report released on Monday Ford paid David Bickerstaff, a Southfield engineer,
some $4,000 a day to testify the Bronco II had a rollover rate no higher than
comparable vehicles. The Environmental Working Group review said Ford engineers
knew in 1982 the sport utility vehicle was prone to roll over during routine
safety tests.
March 11, 2003
Edmonton
Journal, "SUVs No Cure for Worst
Winter: Can Provide Sense of invincibility
that often puts these drivers upside-down"
Buffalo
gets an average of more than seven feet of snow
a year, so its drivers are usually pretty savvy
about bad weather.
But that didn't prevent
Cheryl Campbell, a Buffalo police officer, from spinning her General Motors Jimmy
sport-utility vehicle on ice a couple of weeks ago.
"I came around
a curve too fast, hit a patch of black ice and did three 360-degree spins without
the four-wheel drive helping one bit," she said. "Having an SUV definitely
makes winter drivers overconfident. We see it all the time."
March 10, 2003
Press
Release, "Environmental Working
Group Alleges Ford Hid SUV Rollover Evidence
For Decades"
The
Washington, D.C.-based Environmental Working
Group announced that Ford Motor Company has fought
mandatory increases in fuel economy for SUVs
and other vehicles by invoking fears that higher
mileage requirements would result in smaller,
more dangerous vehicles. It claim that for Ford
safety has been used to beat back fuel efficiency
regulations.
The Environmental
Working Group also asserted, based on its review of Ford Motor Company documents,
that Ford engineers allegedly were aware in 1982 that the original sport utility
vehicle, the Bronco II, was prone to roll over during routine safety tests. With
modest stability changes that did not significantly reduce rollover potential,
the Bronco II was renamed the Explorer in 1990.
March 7, 2003
Bismarck
Tribune, "Use of Large Vans by Schools
may be Banned"
North
Dakota's state school superintendent may ban
public schools from using 15-passenger vans,
Attorney General Wayne Stenehjem said Thursday.
The larger vans are at
greater risk of rollover crashes when they are full, federal safety regulators
say.
Wayne Sanstead, the
superintendent of the Department of Public Instruction, has cautioned schools
against using the vehicles. However, 110 of them are still being used across
North Dakota.
February 26, 2003
USA
Today, "Crash tests may make SUVs
even more deadly"
New
evidence from the government suggests that key
auto crash tests run by the insurance industry
and federal regulators might make sport-utility
vehicles deadlier to people in small cars. And
USA TODAY research finds little proof the tests
actually lead to vehicles that better protect
their own occupants.
February 26, 2003
Los
Angeles Times, "Automaker data say
SUVs are riskier"
A
key automaker group Tuesday released figures
showing that people in sport utility vehicles
are more likely to die in crashes than are occupants
of passenger cars.
Officials of the Alliance
of Automobile Manufacturers defended the safety of SUVs and said the difference
in death risks was "statistically indiscernible," but independent observers
said the numbers indicate that automakers may be slowly acknowledging the problems
of their most profitable products.
February 26, 2003
CNN.com
Technology, "Voluntary steps urged
for SUV safety;
Report says SUVs pose danger to cars"
The
top U.S. auto safety regulator said on Wednesday
he would let carmakers voluntarily improve the
safety of sport utility vehicles but left open
the option of forcing them to make changes if
necessary.
Jeffrey Runge, who heads
the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, told a congressional hearing
the industry can move more swiftly than government on safety improvements. Declaring
he would not let members of his family drive some SUV models, Runge nevertheless
said some sport utility vehicles are as safe as passenger cars. He did not say
which ones were off limits in his family.
February 18, 2003
Los
Angeles Times, "Study
questions safety of SUVs"
Which
is safer, a Honda Accord or the nearly one-ton-
heavier Ford Expedition? Chances are that the
brawny SUV would hold up better in a wreck. Yet
drivers of Accords and Expeditions have about
the same risk of suffering a fatal accident,
new research shows. And when the risk to other
drivers is factored in, the Accord is safer by
far. Or consider the massive Chevrolet Suburban,
identified by the research as safest among popular
SUVs. But according to the data, drivers of Suburbans
and shrimpy Volkswagen Jettas have about the
same fatality rates.
The novel study's bottom
line: Sport utility vehicles and pickups aren't as protective as many of their
owners believe, while they are also uniquely dangerous to everyone else.
February 3, 2003
Chicago
Tribune, "Church van flips, killing
13-year-old"
Authorities
say a church van that flipped on its side killing
a teenager and seriously injuring two 4-year-olds
is a model some federal experts have targeted
as a safety risk.
Geoffrey Smith, 13,
of Belleville was killed instantly when the Ford E-350 15-passenger van he was
riding in fishtailed on wet pavement Friday night, veered into a ditch and turned
on its side. The boy was pinned inside.
January 27, 2003
The
Wall Street Journal, "Auto Makers
Start To Back Away From Big SUVs: As Outcry
Over the Vehicles Grows, Detroit Pushes Smaller,
Carlike Models
Sport-utility
vehicles have fattened auto companies' profits
and ridden an economic boom into millions of
suburban garages. But now, pressures from society,
government and the auto industry itself are growing
so strong that Detroit is starting to take its
first big steps away from reliance on the traditional,
huge SUV.
Anti-SUV crusaders now
span an unlikely spectrum. The Sierra Club argues that SUVs contribute to global
warming. A religious group protests that Jesus wouldn't drive an SUV. Conservative
columnist Arianna Huffington recently launched television ads tying SUVs to terrorism.
January 23, 2003
USA
Today, "Lawsuits give Ford publicity
problem"
Ford
Motor, working hard to put financial and quality
problems behind it, is being dogged by high-profile
court battles that are likely to generate publicity
through the rest of the year.
The cases challenge
product and engineering decisions made more than a decade ago and question the
company's honesty.
Defective Vehicles - Personal
Injury Attorneys
With over
50 attorneys in three offices nationwide, Lieff Cabraser
Heimann & Bernstein, LLP, is widely regarded as
one of the premier personal injury law firms in the
U.S. Since our founding in 1972, we have handled and
resolved thousands of personal injury cases in state
and federal courts throughout the country. For the
last five years, the National Law Journal has
selected Lieff Cabraser as one of the nation's top
plaintiffs' firms.
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with decades of litigation experience.
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