fbpx
Wikipedia

2009–2011 Toyota vehicle recalls

The 2009–11 Toyota vehicle recalls involved three separate but related recalls of automobiles by the Japanese manufacturer Toyota Motor Corporation, which occurred at the end of 2009 and the start of 2010. Toyota initiated the recalls, the first two with the assistance of the U.S. National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA), after reports that several vehicles experienced unintended acceleration. The first recall, on November 2, 2009, was to correct a possible incursion of an incorrect or out-of-place front driver's side floor mat into the foot pedal well, which can cause pedal entrapment. The second recall, on January 21, 2010, was begun after some crashes were shown not to have been caused by floor mat incursion. This latter defect was identified as a possible mechanical sticking of the accelerator pedal causing unintended acceleration, referred to as Sticking Accelerator Pedal by Toyota. The original action was initiated by Toyota in their Defect Information Report, dated October 5, 2009, amended January 27, 2010.[1] Following the floor mat and accelerator pedal recalls, Toyota also issued a separate recall for hybrid anti-lock brake software in February 2010.[2]

Two of the vehicles under recall: the Toyota Camry (XV40) at top, and the Toyota Corolla (E140) at bottom

As of January 28, 2010, Toyota had announced recalls of approximately 5.2 million vehicles for the pedal entrapment/floor mat problem, and an additional 2.3 million vehicles for the accelerator pedal problem. Approximately 1.7 million vehicles are subject to both.[3][4] Certain related Lexus models and the Pontiac Vibe (the latter being based on the Corolla) were also affected.[5][6] The next day, Toyota widened the recall to include 1.8 million vehicles in Europe and 75,000 in China.[7] By then, the worldwide total number of cars recalled by Toyota stood at 9 million.[8] Sales of multiple recalled models were suspended for several weeks as a result of the accelerator pedal recall,[9] with the vehicles awaiting replacement parts. As of January 2010, 21 deaths were alleged due to the pedal problem since 2000, but following the January 28 recall, additional NHTSA complaints brought the alleged total to 37.[10] The number of alleged victims and reported problems sharply increased following the recall announcements,[11] which were heavily covered by U.S. media,[12] although the causes of individual reports were difficult to verify.[13][14][15] Government officials, automotive experts, Toyota, and members of the general public contested the scope of the sudden acceleration issue and the veracity of victim and problem reports.[16][17][18] Various parties attributed sudden unintended acceleration reports to mechanical, electric, and driver error causes.[19][20][21] Some US owners that had their recalled vehicles repaired still reported accelerator pedal issues, leading to investigations and the finding of improper repairs.[22][23] The recalls further led to additional NHTSA and Toyota investigations,[24][25] along with multiple lawsuits.[26]

On February 8, 2011, the NHTSA, in collaboration with NASA, released its findings into the investigation on the Toyota drive-by-wire throttle system. After a 10-month search, NASA and NHTSA scientists found no electronic defect in Toyota vehicles.[27] Driver error or pedal misapplication was found responsible for most of the incidents.[28] The report ended by stating, "Our conclusion is Toyota's problems were mechanical, not electrical." This included sticking accelerator pedals, and pedals caught under floor mats.[29]

However, on October 24, 2013, a jury ruled against Toyota and found that unintended acceleration could have been caused due to deficiencies in the drive-by-wire throttle system or Electronic Throttle Control System (ETCS). Michael Barr of the Barr Group testified[30] that NASA had not been able to complete its examination of Toyota's ETCS and that Toyota did not follow best practices for real time life-critical software, and that a single bit flip which can be caused by cosmic rays could cause unintended acceleration. As well, the run-time stack of the real-time operating system was not large enough and that it was possible for the stack to grow large enough to overwrite data that could cause unintended acceleration.[31][32] As a result, Toyota has entered into settlement talks with its plaintiffs.[33]

Recall timeline edit

  • Sep 26, 2007 – US: 55,000 Toyota Camry and ES 350 cars in "all-weather" floor mat recall.[34]
  • Nov 02, 2009 – US: 3.8 million Toyota and Lexus vehicles again recalled due to floor mat problem, this time for all driver's side mats.[5]
  • Nov 26, 2009 – US: floor mat recall amended to include brake override[4] and increased to 4.2 million vehicles.[citation needed]
  • Jan 21, 2010 – US: 2.3 million Toyota vehicles recalled due to faulty accelerator pedals[6] (of those, 2.1 million already involved in floor mat recall).[3]
  • Jan 27, 2010 – US: 1.1 million Toyotas added to amended floor mat recall.[35]
  • Jan 29, 2010 – Europe, China: 1.8 million Toyotas added to faulty accelerator pedal recall.[7]
  • Feb 08, 2010 – Worldwide: 436,000 hybrid vehicles in brake recall following 200 reports of Prius brake glitches.[2]
  • Feb 08, 2010 – US: 7,300 model year 2010 Camry vehicles recalled over potential brake tube problems.[36]
  • Feb 12, 2010 – US: 8,000 MY 2010 4WD Tacoma pick-up trucks recalled over concerns about possible defective front drive shafts.[37][38]
  • Apr 16, 2010 – US: 600,000 MY 1998–2010 Toyota Sienna for possible corrosion of spare tire carrier cable.[39]
  • Apr 19, 2010 – World: 21,000 MY 2010 Toyota Land Cruiser Prado and 13,000 Lexus GX 460 SUV's recalled to reprogram the stability control system.[40][41]
  • Apr 28, 2010 – US: 50,000 MY 2003 Toyota Sequoia recalled to reprogram the stability control system.[42]
  • May 21, 2010 – Japan: 4,509, US: 7,000 MY 2010 LS for steering system software update[43]
  • July 5, 2010 – World: 270,000 Crown and Lexus models for valve springs with potential production issue.[44]
  • July 29, 2010 – US: 412,000 Avalons and LX 470s for replacement of steering column components.[45]
  • August 28, 2010 – US & Canada: approximately 1.13 million Toyota Corolla and Toyota Matrix vehicles produced between 2005 and 2008 for Engine Control Modules (ECM) that may have been improperly manufactured.[46]
  • February 8, 2011 – US: NASA and NHTSA inquiry reveals that there were no electronic faults in Toyota cars that would have caused acceleration issues. However, accelerator pedal entrapments remain a problem.[47]
  • February 22, 2011 – US: Toyota recalls an additional 2.17 million vehicles for accelerator pedals that become trapped on floor hardware.[48]

Floor mat recall edit

On September 26, 2007, Toyota recalled 55,000 sets of heavy-duty rubber floor mats from the Toyota Camry and ES 350 sedans.[34] The recalled mats were of the optional "all-weather" type. NHTSA stated that the recall was due to the risk that unsecured mats could move forward and trap the accelerator pedal.[34]

External image
  Accelerator trapped by unsecured floor mat, causing wide-open throttle (Associated Press)[49]

On August 28, 2009, a two-car collision killed four people riding in a Lexus dealer-provided loaner ES 350 in San Diego, California.[50][51][52][53] The NHTSA released a safety investigation report on October 25, finding that the accident vehicle was wrongly fitted with all-weather rubber floor mats meant for the RX 400h SUV, and that these mats were not secured by either of the two retaining clips.[54] The brake hardware also showed signs of heavy braking consistent with a stuck accelerator pedal.[54] The report stated that the accelerator pedal's hinge did not allow for relieving obstructions, and the dashboard lacked directions for the three-second emergency press of the push button keyless ignition. NHTSA investigators also recovered the accident vehicle's accelerator pedal, which was still "bonded" to the SUV floor mat.[54] The return spring action of the accelerator pedal was found to be "smooth and unencumbered."[55]

Another investigation conducted by the San Diego County Sheriff's Department found that three days before the crash another customer had complained to the dealership about the floor mat trapping the same loaner car's accelerator pedal while driving.[56] The prior driver had switched to neutral and tugged on the floor mat, which released the accelerator.[56]

On November 2, 2009, the NHTSA denied a petition to reopen previously closed unintended acceleration investigations of Toyota vehicles, stating they had already been thoroughly investigated making it unlikely for the NHTSA to reach any new conclusions.[57] Later that day Toyota issued a voluntary recall of 3.8 million vehicles, with a letter sent to owners asking them to remove the driver floor mat and not replace it with any other type of mat.[5] In its November 2, 2009 recall announcement, Toyota appeared to claim the floor mats were solely at fault, stating, "The question of unintended acceleration involving Toyota and Lexus vehicles has been repeatedly and thoroughly investigated by NHTSA, without any finding of defect other than the risk from an unsecured or incompatible driver's floor mat",[5][58] but the NHTSA issued another statement stating, "This matter is not closed until Toyota has effectively addressed the defect", the letter was "inaccurate and misleading", and that, "removal of the floor mats is simply an interim measure, not a remedy of the underlying defect in the vehicles."[59][60]

Affected vehicles for floor mat recall edit

According to Toyota USA, the floor mat recall is confined to the following models:[61]

Toyota UK states that the floor mat recall affects US models only.[62]

Amended recall to include accelerator pedal edit

On November 25, 2009, Toyota amended its floor mat recall involving the same 3.8 million vehicles sold in North America. Toyota will reconfigure the accelerator pedal, replace the all-weather floor mats with thinner mats, and install a brake override system to prevent[63] unwanted acceleration.[4] The brake override system, also called "brake to idle" and already a common design in German cars, allows the driver to override the accelerator by hitting the brakes. In a follow-up statement, the NHTSA announced the November 25, 2009 recall details as a "vehicle-based remedy" to address the floor mat pedal issue.[64] According to Toyota, the repair work done under the amended recall for floor mat incursion problems are as follows:[4]

  • The accelerator pedal will be shaved to reduce the risk of floor mat entrapment.
  • All-weather floor mats will be removed and replaced with a newly designed mat.
  • A brake override system, which cuts engine power if both the accelerator and brake are detected as pressed, will be installed.
  • A replacement pedal with the same shape as the modified pedal would be made available at a later date.
  • For drivers who have existing all-weather floor mats but do not need or want the newly designed all-weather floor mat, the existing mat will be removed and the owner reimbursed.

In its November 25, 2009 announcement, Toyota stated that dealers would be instructed first on how to reshape the accelerator pedal for the repair.[4] Installation of the brake override began in January 2010 on Toyota Camry and Lexus ES 350 models, the vehicles with the most units included in the recall.[40][65]

Accelerator pedal recall edit

On January 21, 2010, Toyota initiated a second recall, this time in response to reports of accelerator pedals sticking in cars without floor mats.[9] The company had received three such complaints in 2009.[66] In its recall announcement, Toyota stated that:

The condition is rare and does not occur suddenly. It can occur when the pedal mechanism becomes worn and, in certain conditions, the accelerator pedal may become harder to depress, slower to return or, in the worst case, stuck in a partially depressed position.[4]

A concurrent NHTSA press release identified the issue as the "Sticky Pedal Recall" and described the problem and remedy as follows:

  • The accelerator pedal becomes harder to depress or slower to return to the closed position.
  • The accelerator pedal may become stuck in a partially depressed position.
  • Should the pedal become stuck while driving, drivers should switch to neutral and stop.
  • A repair fix would be applied by the manufacturer to prevent the sticky pedal condition.
  • A new pedal would later be made available to replace repaired pedals.[67]

The January 21 recall announcement for the accelerator pedal problem covered 2.3 million vehicles sold in the U.S.[3][4] Toyota then widened the recall to include 1.8 million vehicles in Europe and 75,000 in China.[7] On January 26, Toyota announced that until they had finalized an appropriate remedy to address the potential for sticking accelerator pedals, sales would be suspended for selected vehicles.[9]

On January 31, 2010, The Wall Street Journal reported that U.S. regulators cleared Toyota's proposed repair for the pedals and the company would resume production by February 8.[68] On February 1, 2010, Toyota said that its dealers should get parts to fix the sticky accelerator pedal by the end of the week.[69]

Affected vehicles and vehicle lines edit

According to the manufacturer, Toyota's accelerator pedal recall and suspension of sales in North America is confined to the following vehicles (vehicles affected are based on certain Vehicle Identification Numbers):[4][70]

On January 27, 2010, Toyota USA issued an expanded list of vehicles under recall including:[1]

* vehicles built in Japan use Denso pedals and are not subject to the recall

On January 29, 2010, the Toyota recall was extended to Europe and China.[71] The number of vehicles likely to be affected in Europe was unconfirmed but Toyota said it may reach up to 1.8 million.[7] At the time of recall there had been 30 incidents involving the accelerator pedal problem in Europe.[72]

The vehicles affected in Europe are:[72]

On January 30, 2010, PSA Peugeot Citroën announced it was recalling cars built in a Czech Republic plant, Toyota Peugeot Citroën Automobile Czech, a joint venture with Toyota. Although the company did not say when it would begin the recall, nor how many cars were affected, the plant in question, which produces the Peugeot 107, Citroën C1 and the Toyota Aygo, produces 200,000 cars a year.[74] On February 2, 2010, Toyota announced that the recalls could extend to Africa, Latin America, and the Middle East, where Toyota said it had sold a total of 180,000 vehicles, although the company did not specify how many might be affected by a recall.[75] On February 3, 2010, Toyota Australia announced that its accelerator pedals are made by a different supplier and that there is no need for a recall of Australian-made vehicles.[76]

History of accelerator pedal design edit

Automobile accelerator pedals have historically been mechanical assemblies that link the pedal to the engine throttle by mechanical linkages or a Bowden cable. With the advent of electronic throttle control, accelerator pedals consist of a spring-loaded pedal arm connected to an electronic transducer. This transducer, typically a potentiometer or Hall effect sensor, converts the position of the pedal arm to an electronic signal which is sent to an electronic control unit (ECU).

The older mechanically designed accelerator pedals not only provided a spring return, but the mechanism inherently provided some friction. This friction introduced mechanical hysteresis into the pedal force versus pedal position transfer function. Put more simply, once the pedal was set at a specific position, the friction would help keep the pedal at this setting. This made it easier for the driver to maintain a pedal position. For example, if the driver's foot is slightly jostled by a bump in the road, the accelerator pedal tends to stay at its setting. While these old purely mechanical designs did have some friction, the return spring force was always designed to overcome this friction with a considerable safety margin. The return spring force ensured that the throttle returned to zero if the pedal force applied by the driver was reduced or removed.

With electronic accelerator pedals, there was little inherent friction because of the simplicity of the mechanical design. The tactile pedal response of only a spring force with no hysteresis can make it more difficult for a driver to maintain an accelerator pedal position. Manufacturers of electronic accelerator pedals designed their pedals with additional parts to recreate the tactile response of the older mechanical accelerator pedals. To quote from CTS Corporation's 2004 US patent application:

...drivers generally prefer the feel, i.e., the tactile response, of conventional cable-driven throttle systems. Designers have therefore attempted to address this preference with mechanisms for emulating the tactile response of cable-driven accelerator pedals.[77]

The Toyota electronic accelerator pedals contain a special friction device made of nylon 4/6 or polyphenylene sulfide within the pedal assembly to recreate the tactile response of older pedals. According to the Toyota recall information, it is this device that, which in some instances, has been preventing the accelerator pedal from returning to zero. To quote from the Toyota recall FAQ:

The issue involves a friction device in the pedal designed to provide the proper "feel" by adding resistance and making the pedal steady and stable. This friction device includes a "shoe" that rubs against an adjoining surface during normal pedal operation. Due to the materials used, wear and environmental conditions, these surfaces may, over time, begin to stick and release instead of operating smoothly. In some cases, friction could increase to a point that the pedal is slow to return to the idle position or, in rare cases, the pedal sticks, leaving the throttle partially open.[78]

According to Toyota, the tactile response friction device in the affected Toyota electronic accelerator pedals sometimes creates too much friction. This excess friction either slows the pedal return or completely stops it. In the worst case, once a pedal is pushed to a specific setting, it stays at the setting even if the driver removes their foot from the pedal. Early reports, in March 2007, involved the Tundra pickup truck, which used nylon 4/6 in the friction lever.[79]

Some questions and confusion exist if the Toyota explanation fully accounts for all instances of unintended acceleration involving Toyota vehicles. CTS Corporation,[80] the American manufacturer of the electronic accelerator pedals that Toyota claims are at fault, has announced that:

The problem of sudden unintended acceleration has been reported to have existed in some Lexus vehicles and Toyota vehicles going back to 1999, when CTS did not even make this product for any customer, CTS believes that the rare slow return pedal phenomenon, which may occur in extreme environmental conditions, should absolutely not be linked with any sudden unintended acceleration incidents. CTS is also not aware of any accidents and injuries caused by the rare slow return pedal condition, to the best of its knowledge. CTS wishes to clarify that it does not, and has never made, any accelerator pedals for Lexus vehicles and that CTS also has no accelerator pedals in Toyota vehicles prior to model year 2005.[81]

In June 2010, Chrysler also recalled 35,000 Dodge and Jeep models for sticky accelerator pedals made by CTS Corporation. Chrysler stated that the CTS pedals have pivot bushings that may dislodge, causing the accelerator to become stuck or slow to return to idle.[82]

Field workaround for sudden unintended acceleration edit

Different "workarounds", user actions that ameliorate or prevent a negative, previously unforeseen circumstance, have been suggested as temporary fixes:

  • Putting the car's transmission in neutral during out-of-control acceleration disengages the gears;[83]
  • Turning the ignition to the ACC (accessory) position, which, while cutting power to the engine, will also disable the power steering and the brake assist.
  • Turning the ignition key to the OFF position, which will also cut power, but may cause lockage of the steering wheels and will also disable the power steering and the brake assist.[84]

On whether braking alone may fail to stop affected vehicles, a driver account in the Los Angeles Times claimed that the attempt to stop a 2005 Camry was unsuccessful with both the brake and emergency brake.[85] However, tests of the Camry by Car and Driver in 2009, attempting to use the brakes to stop acceleration of a purposely stuck throttle at 70, 100 and 120 miles per hour (110, 160 and 190 km/h), found that the test driver was able to reduce speed to 10 mph (16 km/h) in all instances, and in the 70 and 100 mph (110 and 160 km/h) tests, stop the car completely.[86][87] The Camry's braking distances with a purposely stuck accelerator were also shorter than that of the Ford Taurus' regular stopping distance.[86] Car and Driver concluded that, based on their emergency stopping tests, the Camry's brakes could overcome the accelerator in all cases even without a brake override, and that stopping distances with a wide-open throttle were largely indiscernible from regular braking.[86]

In 2010, Edmunds.com also tested the stopping distances of a Toyota Camry SE V6 with a purposely stuck wide-open throttle. Their tests found that the car's brakes could override a stuck accelerator and bring the car to a stop. Although the transmission downshifted and the engine continued to propel the car, the stopping distance compared "favorably to a normal panic stop on wet asphalt."[88] Edmunds.com did note that switching to neutral was the best option, given that average drivers may not press the brakes as firmly, and lighter presses will simply wear the brakes down.[88] The German Commission on Technical Compliance (TÜV) of Rheinland also tested the stopping distance of Toyota iQ, Aygo, Yaris, Auris, Verso, Avensis, and RAV4 models.[89] With the accelerator purposely jammed to 80% of maximum speed, each vehicle was able to brake safely to a halt.[89] The TÜV findings indicated that each model met the legal requirements for deceleration and stopping distances, and that all Toyota models tested had brakes that could override a stuck accelerator.[89]

Anti-lock brake software recall edit

On February 3, 2010, the NHTSA announced that it had received reports from 102 drivers of possible problems related to the braking system on the 2010 model year Toyota Prius,[90] while an additional 14 such reports had been received in Japan. Three of these reports claimed that brake problems had led to the car crashing, with one accident in July 2009 occurring when a Prius crashed head-on into another car injuring two people.[91] The Prius was not involved in Toyota's second recall, although it had been involved in the first recall involving floor mats. Toyota said that it was investigating the reports, and that it would be "premature to comment."[92] On February 3, 2010, the Japanese Transport Ministry began investigating the redesigned Prius,[93] and Toyota said that it was aware of 77 Prius brake complaints in Japan.[94] On February 4, 2010, the NHTSA announced it had opened an investigation into the issues with the Prius's brakes,[95] which Toyota said was caused by a software glitch. The company said it was looking into the best way to solve the problem.[96] An internal NHTSA memo indicated that the issue was the "short delay" in regenerative braking when hitting a bump, resulting in increased stopping distance.[97]

On February 6, 2010, Toyota said that it had fixed the braking problem on Prius models built since late January 2010 via a software update for the ABS to improve brake response.[2] On the same day, a Japanese newspaper reported that Toyota had contacted dealers in Japan about their intent to recall all affected vehicles. While it was unclear if the same step would be taken elsewhere, American dealers had been told that Toyota was planning on repairing the vehicles.[98] On February 8, Toyota announced a voluntary global recall of 2010 model year Prius models produced through late January 2010.[2][99] The affected vehicles will receive a software update for the brakes and its ABS system.[2] In total, Toyota recalled three hybrid vehicles to reprogram the anti-lock braking (ABS) software.[40] In February 2010, a US federal grand jury in New York began the process of determining if there is probable cause to charge Toyota criminally for the way it has handled the Prius' brake recall,[100] and a civil class action lawsuit has been filed on behalf of 2010 Prius hybrid owners.[101] A total of 133,000 Prius vehicles in the U.S. and 52,000 in Europe are to receive the same software update.[2] Guardian.co.uk reports that this affects the third-generation Prius built before January 27, 2010.

Affected vehicles for anti-lock brake software recall edit

Other recalls edit

On February 8, 2009, Toyota announced a recall of approximately 7,300 early 2010 model year 4-cylinder Camrys due to the possibility of the power steering hose rubbing into the front brake line which may cause a brake fluid leak.[102]

On February 3, 2010, Toyota recalled approximately 153,000 vehicles from model years 2005 to 2011 for failing to comply with requirements of FMVSS 110, "Tire Selection and Rims", due to missing load-carrying capacity labels.

On February 12, 2010, Toyota recalled approximately 8,000 2010 model year 4WD Tacoma trucks for potential front drive shaft issues. The recall involves inspecting a drive shaft component which if cracked will be replaced.[103] The Tacoma pickups were built between mid-December 2009 and early February 2010. Most affected vehicles have not been sold.[104]

Another recall for frame corrosion recall was confined to the following model(s):[105] MY 2000–2003 Toyota Tundra. According to Toyota USA, frame corrosion could allow spare tires or the fuel tank to fall off the vehicle.

On July 7, 2010, Toyota recalled 270,000 Lexus and Crown vehicles worldwide for improperly manufactured valve springs. According to Toyota, the condition can cause rough idling and potential engine stalling.

On October 21, 2010, Toyota announced a recall of 1.53 million vehicles (740,000 in the U.S., 599,000 in Japan, and 191,000 in Europe and other markets) worldwide; the recall affected MY 2005 and 2006 Avalon, MY 2004 to 2006 Highlander (non-hybrid) and Lexus RX330 and MY 2006 Lexus GS300, IS250 and IS350; the models affected in Japan and elsewhere (except the U.S.) include MY 2002 to 2006 Toyota Crown, Crown Majesta, Harrier, Mark X, Alphard, Kluger, and Lexus GS350, IS250 and IS350. The recall concerns brake fluid leakage from the master cylinder (U.S. market and non-U.S. marketed Toyota Crown and Lexus GS350) and an electrical problem with the fuel pump, which would cause engine stalling (all markets except the U.S.).

On November 9, 2011, Toyota announced a recall of 550,000 vehicles (447,000 in the U.S., 38,000 in Japan, and 25,000 in Australia and New Zealand) worldwide; the recall affected MY 2004-2005 Camry, Highlander, Sienna, and Solara, MY 2004 Avalon, MY 2006 Highlander HV, MY 2004-2005 Lexus ES330, and RX330 and MY 2006 RX400h. The recall concerns a steering problem caused by the misalignment of the inner and outer rings of the crankshaft pulley, which could cause noise or the Check Engine light to illuminate; if this problem is not corrected, the power steering belt can fall off the pulley, which can cause a sudden loss of power assist.

On October 10, 2012, Toyota announced a recall of 7.43 million vehicles (2.47 million in the US, 460,000 in Japan, 1.39 million in Europe, and 3.11 million in other markets) worldwide. In the US the recall affects MY 2005-2010 Yaris, Corolla, Matrix, Camry, RAV4, Highlander, Tundra, and Sequoia as well as Scion xB and xD. In Japan, the recall affects MY 2005-2010 Vitz, Belta, Ractis, Ist, and Corolla Rumion. In Europe, the recall affects MY 2005-2010 Yaris, Corolla, Auris, Camry, and RAV-4. Vehicles in overseas markets are also affected. The recall concerns a problem with the driver's side power window switch that "sticks" and could lead it to melt or catch fire.[106] It is "not something that would cause any deadly accidents like the recall of 2009" and repairs include the application of a special fluorine grease to the switch.[106]

On January 30, 2013, Toyota announced a recall of one million vehicles in the US. The recall affects 752,000 MY 2003-2004 Corolla and Corolla Matrix models. The recall concerns the airbag module, which can cause the airbag to inflate improperly. Toyota also announced a recall affecting 270,000 MY 2006-2012 Lexus IS models. This recall concerns loose nuts on the wiper blades, which can cause the wipers to fail, especially if there is a heavy buildup of snow.

On March 15, 2013, Toyota announced a recall of 209,000 vehicles in the US. The recall affects MY 2007-2013 FJ Cruiser models. The recall concerns the driver and front passenger seat belt retractors, which can come loose, especially if the rear doors are slammed repeatedly.

Investigations edit

Numerous investigations have taken place, including those by the U.S. NHTSA and the Japanese transport ministry.[107] The difficulty of investigations is compounded by the fact that driver error can be a possibility in certain cases. The Wall Street Journal reported, "Even when dealers and automakers suspect driver error, it is difficult for them to outright blame their customers for fear of alienating them or appearing insensitive",[20] which USA Today also suggested.[108] Questions about why cases are mainly in the U.S. have also been raised by international investigations; German publication Der Spiegel reported that similar accidents have rarely occurred outside North America, and although there have been some reports of stuck Toyota accelerator pedals in Germany, all drivers braked successfully without loss of life.[109]

In another U.S. incident, on December 26, 2009, four people died in Southlake, Texas, a suburb of Dallas, when their 2008 Toyota Avalon sped off the road and through a fence, landing upside down in a pond. The car's floor mats were found in the trunk of the car, where owners had been advised to put them as part of the recall.[110] According to the police report, the driver suffered from epilepsy, but investigators could not rule out either a vehicle defect or the possibility that the driver had suffered a seizure.[15][111]

On Feb 17, 2010, US safety regulators launched an investigation into Corolla steering complaints.[112][113] Following the widespread media publicity of the recalls, several media publications suggested that investigations of subsequent reports would have considered the possibility of "copycat complaints" and hoaxes, with potential complainants seeking to capitalize on possible settlement money,[114] or affected by the psychological bandwagon effect of the mass publicity.[115]

On March 14, 2010, the Norwegian government considered whether to ban Prius cars from roads in Norway pending an investigation after a near-fatal incident involving a senior citizen.[116] On March 29, after receipt of technical and other information, police indicted the driver involved in the Prius incident for making "a false emergency call to police".[117]

The use of vehicle event data recorders and video surveillance also proved beneficial to investigators, with findings of driver error in a March 9, 2010 Prius alleged sudden acceleration crash, where a 56-year-old housekeeper claimed to have braked but was recorded pressing the wrong pedal,[118] and also in a March 29, 2010 Camry alleged sudden acceleration crash, where a 76-year-old driver claimed to have braked, but was filmed not doing so until after impact.[119]

NHTSA investigations edit

NHTSA data shows that there was an annual average of 26 abrupt acceleration reports in the 1999–2001 Toyota Camry and Lexus ES models. This number increased by more than 400% to a total of 132 annually in 2002–2004 models, which were designed with new electronic throttles.[120] Toyota responded by stating,

Six times in the past six years NHTSA has undertaken an exhaustive review of allegations of unintended acceleration on Toyota and Lexus vehicles and six times the agency closed the investigation without finding any electronic engine control system malfunction to be the cause of unintended acceleration.[121]

In 2004, the NHTSA launched a probe of throttle control systems on around 1 million Lexus and Toyota sedans.[122] Upon that probe, Toyota urged the NHTSA to define the issues as quick bursts where the engine surged to "something less than a wide-open throttle." The company compared the complaints to previous sudden unintended acceleration cases the NHTSA deemed "driver error."[122] It also said the computer could not open the throttle without the accelerator pedal pressed, and, the brakes would be able to stop the car anyway.[122]

After several months of investigating, the NHTSA said it found no evidence of a defect and no data was indicating any bad parts.[122] Christopher Santucci, an employee of Toyota's Washington, D.C. office and an NHTSA employee until he was hired by Toyota in 2003, testified that he was informed by the NHTSA in March 2004 about the pending investigation over unintended acceleration complaints. According to Santucci in his deposition, his former NHTSA colleagues decided not to investigate some incidents involving acceleration lasting longer than 1 second. The decision to exclude certain incidents from the investigation reduced the significance of the issue to the NHTSA at least on paper.[122][123][124] However, in 2005, 2006 and 2008, Toyota customers again asked the NHTSA to investigate uncontrolled acceleration from electronic throttle controls and power steering issues. Although there were hundreds of complaints, the NHTSA found no evidence of defects; and in every case, Toyota provided data it said showed no such evidence.

On November 2, 2009, the NHTSA denied a petition to reopen previously closed unintended investigations of Toyota vehicles, stating they were unlikely to reach any new conclusions.[125] In February 2010, however, NHTSA was again looking into the electronic throttle control systems on Toyota vehicles.[24] In February 2010, State Farm insurance revealed that it had warned NHTSA in late 2007 on an increased trend of Toyota accidents related to the recalled models; other insurers stated however that they had not seen such a trend.[126] On June 1, 2010, the NHTSA opened an investigation into reports that floor mats were jamming accelerators in Ford Fusion and Mercury Milan sedans.[127] On June 30, 2010, NHTSA reported on its latest broad study of unintended acceleration on all car makes, including Toyota, in conjunction with NASA and the National Academy of Sciences. NHTSA stated that it was unable to find electronic throttle defects, but identified floor mat entrapment and pedals that were slow to return to idle as two causes of Toyota complaints. NHTSA also stated it could only verify one Toyota unintended acceleration accident caused by a vehicle defect.[128] On July 14, 2010, The Wall Street Journal reported that NHTSA investigations of 75 accidents alleged to sudden acceleration in Toyota vehicles had found driver error as the primary cause in all but one case attributed to floor mats.[129][130] Black box recorder data found that during these crashes, the throttle was open and brakes not pressed.[130] On July 30, The Wall Street Journal quoted the former head of NHTSA's Recall Management Division stating that the investigation "has become very political", with Department of Transportation officials "hoping against hope that they find something that points back to a flaw".[131] Although the NHTSA study finding driver error was reportedly complete, DOT officials had blocked its release.[131]

On February 8, 2011, NASA and the NHTSA announced the findings of a ten-month study concerning the causes of the Toyota malfunctions of 2009.[132] According to their findings, there were no electronic faults in the cars that could have caused the sudden-acceleration problems.[47][133][134][135] "The jury is back, the verdict is in: There is no electronic-based cause for unintended high-speed acceleration in Toyotas, period," Transportation Department Secretary Ray LaHood declared in the LA Times.[47]

MLIT investigations edit

Hiroko Tabuchi writing in The New York Times claims that problematic vehicles may have been accurately reported in Japan due to police correctly blaming driver error, as no verified unintended acceleration case exists. [citation needed] The Japanese Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism (MLIT) released its findings of sudden acceleration complaints in February 2010, finding that of the 134 cases logged by the ministry between 2007 and 2009, Toyota accounted for 38 cases (28.3% of all reported).[136] Because Toyota's market share was approximately 27.8% of all passenger cargo vehicles, the MLIT noted that no particularly unusual rate was found among these complaints.[136]

US congressional hearings edit

The House Oversight and Government Reform Committee and the House Energy and Commerce Committee held hearings in February 2010.[20][137] Retired social worker Rhonda Smith testified before Congress that her car accelerated out of control but the NHTSA investigator determined that a misplaced floor mat had caused the problem;[20] the subsequent owner of the car reported no trouble after driving the car over 27,000 miles.[20]

In a February 2010 letter to Toyota, US congressional investigators "said a review of consumer complaints produced by Toyota shows that company personnel identified sticking pedals or floor mats as the cause of only 16 percent of the unintended acceleration reports".[138] Several media reports later claimed that Toyota had announced that the recalls will not completely solve the accelerator pedal problems. On February 24, 2010, Toyota responded that it "has rigorously tested its solutions" and is "confident" with the recall repairs, but that it would continue to monitor other possible contributing factors for unintended acceleration, including mechanical, electronics, and driver error.[139] Akio Toyoda, the president and CEO of Toyota, issued the following statement in regards to the recalled vehicles:[140]

Toyota has, for the past few years, been expanding its business rapidly. Quite frankly, I fear the pace at which we have grown may have been too quick. I would like to point out here that Toyota's priority has traditionally been the following: First; Safety, Second; Quality, and Third; Volume. These priorities became confused, and we were not able to stop, think, and make improvements as much as we were able to before, and our basic stance to listen to customers' voices to make better products has weakened somewhat. We pursued growth over the speed at which we were able to develop our people and our organization, and we should sincerely be mindful of that. I regret that this has resulted in the safety issues described in the recalls we face today, and I am deeply sorry for any accidents that Toyota drivers have experienced. Especially, I would like to extend my condolences to the members of the Saylor family, for the accident in San Diego. I would like to send my prayers again, and I will do everything in my power to ensure that such a tragedy never happens again.

In early 2010, the US government began considering requiring all vehicles sold in the US to have accelerator override built into their brake systems.[141]

Research groups have questioned whether Toyota would "get off easily" because of its large investment in lobbying in Washington, with close ties to the congressional representatives who will lead inquiries into the company's string of safety problems.[142] Other publications noted that half the Democratic congressional members involved in the hearings had received campaign contributions from the United Auto Workers union, a major stockholder of Toyota's top U.S. rival, General Motors.[143]

US governors' letter to congressional members edit

On February 10, 2010, four bipartisan US governors from the states of Kentucky, Indiana, Mississippi, and Alabama where Toyota operates plants wrote a letter to Congress commenting about "the federal government's obvious conflict of interest because of its huge financial stake in some of its competitors," referring to Toyota as a "victim" of the media's "aggressive and questionable news coverage". The letter also noted there were "16.4 million recalls in the auto industry for 2009", "many as serious or more serious" than Toyota's recall.[144][145]

Aftermath edit

Toyota stopped producing vehicles on certain production lines for the week of February 1, 2010, to assess and coordinate activities. The North America vehicle production facilities affected were located in Cambridge and Woodstock, Ontario, Canada (where Corolla, Matrix, and RAV4 models are produced), Princeton, Indiana (Highlander and Sequoia), Georgetown, Kentucky (Avalon and Camry), and San Antonio, Texas (Tundra).[146] In addition to recalling vehicles, Toyota announced that it would install brake override systems on all Lexus, Scion and Toyota vehicles by the end of 2010.[65]

On February 3, 2010, United States Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood advised owners of vehicles affected by the recall to "stop driving" their vehicles until they can be fixed by a dealer. LaHood later retracted his statement, stating it was "obviously, a misstatement."[147] Secretary La Hood was criticized for making that statement by some media columnists, who suspected La Hood of having a conflict-of-interest due to the U.S. government's auto bailout partial ownership of Toyota's domestic rivals, General Motors and Chrysler.[16][148][149]

Economic impact edit

The recall came at a difficult time for Toyota, as it was struggling to emerge from the recession and had already suffered from a resultant decrease in sales,[150] and the low exchange rate from yen to US dollars.[151] On the day the recall was announced in the US, it was also announced that 750 jobs would be cut at Toyota's British plant at Burnaston, near Derby.[150] Also, it was estimated that each Toyota dealership in the US could lose between US$1.75 million to US$2 million a month in revenue, a total loss of US$2,470 million across the country from the entire incident.[8] Additionally, Toyota Motors as a whole announced that it could face losses totaling as much as US$2,000 million from lost output and sales worldwide.[75] Between 25 January and 29 January 2010 Toyota shares fell in value by 15%.[152]

According to analysts, Toyota owners (including owners of cars not recalled) may also be economically affected by the recall, as the damage to Toyota's reputation could negatively affect the resale value of used cars.[153][154]

Manufacturer changes edit

In addition to its recall efforts, a new global quality committee to coordinate defect analysis and future recall announcements was announced by Toyota in early 2010, along with a Swift Market Analysis Response Team ("SMART") in the U.S. to conduct on-site vehicle inspections, expanded Event Data Recorder usage and readers, third-party quality consultation, and increased driver safety education initiatives.[118][155] Industry analysts noted that the recall response was a challenge for The Toyota Way manufacturing philosophy, because the recalled parts were not due to factory errors or quality control problems, but rather to design issues leading to consumer complaints.[156] As a result, better communication of consumer issues with management was needed,[156] and so the global quality committee aimed to be more responsive to consumer concerns.[155]

Competitor reactions edit

One day after Toyota's announced sales suspension General Motors began offering a US$1,000 cash rebate targeted toward Toyota owners.[157] By February 1, 2010 Ford, Chrysler, and Hyundai were offering similar incentives.[158]

Release of Toyota driver jailed for fatal crash edit

In February 2010, a motion for retrial was submitted on behalf of a Minnesota man, Koua Fong Lee, who, in 2008, was sentenced to eight years in jail for rear-ending a car, killing three of the five occupants and injuring the other two. This happened in June 2006 when he was driving home from church with his family and exiting the highway. Koua insists that his 1996 Toyota Camry sped up to between 70 and 90 mph (110 and 140 km/h) despite heavy braking. In May 2010, a vehicle inspector hired by attorneys for the convicted man reported finding problems with the car's accelerator system.[159][160][161]

At least two of the jurors from the 2008 trial questioned the guilty verdict,[162] and one of the injured survivors filed suit against Toyota and the local dealership that sold the car, stating that he believed Lee should be set free.[163][164] In June 2010, the Ramsey County Attorney and prosecutor Susan Gaertner opposed a new trial, stating that she saw no evidence that Koua's Camry experienced "sudden unintended acceleration", and a US District Court Judge was given until September 2010 to decide whether or not Lee should be re-tried.[165] In August 2010, the judge ruled that Lee would be re-tried, but the prosecutor declined to prosecute. Before the ruling, Gaertner offered Lee release with the condition that he would still have a felony conviction on his record, barring him from driving privileges for ten years, and that he would be jailed if arrested for anything else. Lee did not agree to such conditions.[166] Later that month, a Minnesota judge freed Lee from prison and Gaertner said she would immediately drop the charges.[167]

Media coverage and criticism edit

According to news analysis by the Project for Excellence in Journalism, which analyzed weekly output from newspapers (The New York Times, The Washington Post, USA Today, and others) as well as network television (ABC, CBS, NBC, and others), the Toyota recalls were the #5 most reported story on U.S. news for the week of January 25–31, 2010, at 4% of all coverage.[12] The following week of February 1–7, 2010, the story reached #2, at 11% of all news coverage.[168] On February 10, Toyota dealers in the five-state Southeast region pulled all advertising from ABC stations in protest of "excessive" reporting on the Toyota recalls.[169] On March 5, the Associated Press described "relentless media coverage" of the recalls from news outlets.[115]

During the height of the recall crisis, Toyota came in for extensive criticism. Editorials criticizing alleged disproportionate coverage of the recalls ran in Automotive News,[170] AutoWeek,[171] BusinessWeek,[172] Car and Driver,[17] Motor Trend,[18] Popular Mechanics,[173] and the National Post.[148][174] Such editorials commonly faulted media outlets for leaving out alternative explanations such as driver inattentiveness, driver skills, DUI, being on the cellphone, erroneous perceptions, reckless driving, or texting as causes of accidents.[18][171][175] In one cited example, the Los Angeles Times did not mention that an alleged Toyota runaway driver was indicted for vehicular manslaughter and driving under the influence of marijuana.[176]

Odds from Car and Driver indicated that the alleged fatality risk was about 1 in 200,000 recalled Toyota vehicles, versus a 1 in 8,000 risk of a fatal car accident in any car in the U.S.,[17] while Consumer Reports stated a 1 in 10,000 chance of an unintended acceleration complaint out of 20 million Toyotas on the road.[16]

James Sikes alleged unintended acceleration case edit

On March 8, 2010, a 2008 Prius allegedly uncontrollably accelerated to 94 miles per hour on a California Highway (US), and the Prius had to be stopped with the verbal assistance of the California Highway Patrol as news cameras watched.[177] The incident received national news coverage, with initial reporting including inaccurate information about the event, such as the claim that a CHP car was used to physically block Sikes' vehicle.[178][179] Subsequent investigations uncovered suspicious information about the alleged runaway Prius driver, 61-year-old James Sikes, including being US$19,000 behind in his Prius car payments and with US$700,000 in accumulated debt.[180][181] Sikes stated he wanted a new car as compensation for the incident.[180][182] Analyses by Edmunds.com and Forbes found Sikes' acceleration claims and fears of shifting to neutral implausible, with Edmunds concluding that "in other words, this is BS",[183] and Michael Fumento in Forbes analyzing Sikes's claims related to the mechanics of his Prius and his contradictions, such as saying he didn't want to take his hands off the steering wheel to shift into neutral even though he held a cell phone in his hand almost the entire time, comparing it to the balloon boy hoax.[181] Further government investigator tests on Sikes's Prius reportedly showed that the brake wear were consistent with intermittent braking, not constant hard braking as he claimed.[184] Sikes also reportedly had a history of false police reports, suspect insurance claims, theft and fraud allegations, and television aspirations.[180] These findings raised questions about "the credibility of Mr. Sikes' reporting of events" in a Congressional memo.[185]

Public image edit

According to a Rasmussen poll released on February 8, 2010, Toyota was viewed favorably by 59% and unfavorably by 29%. The poll also found 72% of Americans have followed the recent Toyota news stories "somewhat closely" and 31% "very closely".[186] A second Rasmussen poll released on February 12 found 23% of Americans believe the federal government is criticizing Toyota to aid General Motors of which it is the majority owner, 38% disagreed, and 39% were unsure.[187]

Other possible causes of unintended acceleration edit

Electronic throttle control system edit

On November 25, 2009, ABC News quoted Sean Kane, head of the for-profit firm Safety Research & Strategies,[188] stating that he had uncovered hundreds of "non-floor mat sudden acceleration cases" which the floor mat recall did not address.[189] Kane, who works with attorneys suing Toyota,[190] said his firm had discovered over 2,000 Toyota sudden acceleration cases involving 16 deaths and 243 injuries,[189] publishing its most comprehensive report on the issue on Feb 5th, 2010.[191] Kane alleged that the problem was not with the accelerator pedals, but with the electronic throttle control systems (ETC).[192] An electronic throttle control system is a drive-by-wire system, in which the accelerator pedal and the engine are indirectly linked electronically, instead of directly linked mechanically.[193] This means that input from the accelerator pedal is just one input used to decide how wide the throttle is opened. On Feb 13, 2010, The Wall Street Journal reported that Kane's company was "controversial" because its income comes from lawsuits against auto manufacturers,[188] which was not disclosed in media reports;[194] auto journalists noted that the firm had a "vested interest" in blaming manufacturer defects while avoiding operator error.[194][195] The Los Angeles Times reported that since Toyota and Lexus began installing electronic throttle control systems in 2001, complaints of unintended acceleration with vehicles from both those brands rose sharply.[192] Electromagnetic interference with the electronic throttle control system is another possible cause of unintended acceleration.[196] Some speculated that cosmic rays, or radiation from outer space, was a possible source for alleged electronic malfunctions.[197]

The Wall Street Journal obtained a copy of a preliminary study dated on February 4, 2010 by the California-based engineering research firm Exponent.[198] The initial study commissioned by Toyota beginning in December 2009 concluded "Exponent has so far been unable to induce, through electrical disturbances to the system, either unintended acceleration or behavior that might be a precursor to such an event, despite concerted efforts toward this goal." For the study Exponent purchased six Toyota and Lexus vehicles which were analyzed by "engineers and technicians specializing in mechanical, electrical, and automotive engineering." According to Exponent, Toyota "didn't limit the scope or budget of its investigation" which is being shared with Toyota and lawmakers. The study will continue for several more months.[199] According to the Los Angeles Times, Exponent's research has been criticized as being relied upon by companies in need of public defense,[200] although the firm has defended its impartiality towards clients ranging from firms to the U.S. government.[200][201] A University of California cardiologist was quoted saying, "I would have picked a firm with more of a reputation of neutrality" citing as an example their determination that secondhand smoke isn't carcinogenic.[200][201] Toyota subsequently asked Stanford University's Center for Automotive Research, a facility partly funded by multiple automakers including Toyota, to also evaluate the electronics claims.[25] The center's J. Christian Gerdes, professor of mechanical engineering, rejected several electronics claims as implausible, and said that his findings were independent and that he received no compensation from Toyota for his evaluation.[201][202]

On Feb. 8, 2010, the NHTSA and NASA concluded the electronics were not to blame after reviewing the electronics and electromagnetic interference. The finding was based on studying over 280,000 lines of software coding on nine vehicles involved in earlier sudden acceleration incidents.[203] And studying the throttle systems at NASA's Langley Research Center and Chrysler's Auburn Hills headquarters.[29]

In January 2021, engineer Colin O'Flynn was able to induce unintended acceleration with components from a Toyota vehicle using electromagnetic fault injection (EMFI) on a test bench. He used an ECU and components from a wrecked 2005 Toyota Corolla. O'Flynn's experiments were conducted without access to the ECU source code, and without access to the confidential report by the Barr Group.[204]

ABC News acceleration controversy edit

On February 22, 2010, ABC News broadcast a report[205] which demonstrated how unintended acceleration could be caused by inducing a short circuit in the throttle control. In the segment, David W. Gilbert, a professor of automotive technology at Southern Illinois University Carbondale, was shown in a late-model Avalon with ABC News reporter Brian Ross. By "inducing a short" in an unspecified circuit, Gilbert was able to cause the Avalon to accelerate dramatically. After the car was stopped, a diagnostic tool connected to the car's ECU displayed no fault code. According to Dr. Gilbert, the proper design of the ETC should not have permitted a short like the one he induced to open the throttle; the ECU should have detected a fault and cut the throttle. Tests on GM vehicles, Gilbert said, did not expose a similar flaw. Autoblog's analysis queried the test's real-world accuracy, noting that the short circuit method was not disclosed outside of wiring normally independent sensors together, the ECU could not be expected to detect unrealistic scenarios, and questioning ABC News' and Brian Ross's objectivity.[206] Autoblog also uncovered that Gilbert was being paid by parties in lawsuits against Toyota.[206] Automotive analyst John McElroy on Autoline Detroit pointed to network news' history of "rigged" car demonstrations, including the 60 Minutes acceleration demo and the Dateline NBC exploding truck scandal,[207] and noted that ABC News' report did not include opposing views or disclose interviewee's financial ties.[207] Toyota responded by inviting ABC News to be present at its evaluation of the test.[207]

On March 8, 2010, Toyota held a live news conference where its engineers demonstrated the same short circuit method on Ford, Chevrolet, Chrysler, and BMW vehicles.[25] In each case, engineers were able to induce the same dramatic acceleration with no ECU fault code.[25] Stanford's Center for Automotive Research stated that ABC News' demo was unrealistic and misleading.[201] A study by Exponent Inc. finding that the short circuit "would be highly unlikely to occur naturally" and could "only be contrived in the laboratory" was also issued.[202] Toyota further demonstrated how Gilbert had allegedly shaved away wiring insulation, cut wires in the ETC, re-spliced them in a particular sequence, and added a control switch.[201][208] Gilbert's financial motive, being paid by Sean Kane, was also questioned.[208] AutoWeek,[209] Edmunds.com,[25] and other automotive sources saw the conference as debunking ABC News' claims.[208] On March 11, 2010, ABC News further admitted to faking[210] part of its report after tachometer screenshots were posted online.[211] The freeze-frames showed the parking brake, open-door, and seat belt warning lights on while the car was allegedly "accelerating" to 6,000 RPM, indicating that the car was actually not moving.[211] Media blog Gawker.com posted the photos and stated, "the tachometer footage is faked".[211] ABC News claimed that it was "impossible to get a good picture of the tachometer" during the actual test,[212] and re-edited the footage. Gawker.com responded that the edited video was even more "staged".[213] The Associated Press added that the falsified footage "created ethical questions".[212]

Possible cruise control cause edit

In February 2010, multiple media reports claimed that Apple Inc. co-founder Steve Wozniak had suggested that faulty software may be part of the problem.[214][215] However, in a subsequent CNN interview, Wozniak stated, "I haven't really said those things. They have put those words in my mouth".[216] Instead, Wozniak said his comments were about a "minor" cruise control issue on one of his several Priuses, and regarding other recalls, "whether it was mats, whether it was a sticky accelerator pedal, whatever – I believe they found the right solution. If Toyota says it's not electrical, then I'm sure they're right."[216] When asked to describe his cruise control problem, Wozniak said, "It's a little more of a procedure of upping the speed, upping the speed, and then suddenly it just sort of went like it thought you told it to go to infinity."[216] As for alternative explanations, Wozniak said "If you're panicked and your car takes off, you don't think of these things."[216] He also clarified that his comments were "to a group of teachers for a discovery museum and talking about an issue of customer support, how hard it is sometimes to get to the people that can really deal with your problems".[216] Automotive journalist John Voelcker's analysis of Wozniak's description blamed the issue on user error, and not being familiar with the design differences of the adaptive cruise control system.[217] In the Prius, unlike some other cars, holding down the accelerate button increases speed in 5 mph increments continuously;[217] Voelcker suggested Wozniak was holding down the button for longer than necessary, setting the cruise to a high set speed, thus resulting in the "smooth"[216] acceleration to high speed he experienced.[217] Some Prius users have also suggested erroneous user input explanations.[218] Others have come forward with their own stories about erratic vehicle behavior while using their cruise control.[219] In March 2010, Ward's Auto reported that user unfamiliarity with the faster response of laser- and radar-based cruise control systems was a likely factor according to AAA, NHTSA, and manufacturer findings.[220]

Driver error edit

The Wall Street Journal reported on February 25, 2010, that "safety regulators, human-error experts, and auto makers say driver error is the primary cause of sudden acceleration."[20] Regarding the 2009-10 Toyota recalls, Ward's Auto noted that NHTSA investigations over past years have found that the majority of sudden unintended acceleration cases are due to driver error.[14] In such cases, accidents are the result of drivers mistakenly stepping on the accelerator pedal instead of the brake.[14] On November 29, 2009, the Los Angeles Times quoted a motor skills consultant stating that the fault in sudden acceleration cases "almost always lies with drivers who step on the wrong pedal."[120] In February 2010, Car and Driver suggested that the alleged accident rate of 1 in 200,000 recalled Toyotas was "highly unlikely" to result from vehicle defects, pointing to an increased danger for drivers who "aren't smart or calm enough to shift to neutral".[17] The same month, Forbes referred to auto industry experts as "skeptical" of defect explanations, suggesting that "driver error and panic account for many reported problems" with recalled Toyotas.[221] On February 4, Leonard Evans, author of Traffic Safety, claimed that driver behavior was the main factor in Toyota accidents, and that the consensus of 70 years of scientific research is that driver error is the prominent explanation for automotive fatalities.[222] In March 2010, Forbes Michael Fumento,[223] The Atlantic's Megan McArdle and attorney Ted Frank argued that the fact that most of the incidents of sudden acceleration in Toyota occur in elderly drivers strongly suggest that there is not an electronics problem as opposed to one of pedal misapplication.[224] Fumento's article was titled: "Why Do Toyotas Hate the Elderly?", and McArdle noted that immigrants were also twice as likely to be involved.[225] However, lawsuits filed regarding sudden unintended acceleration cases, along with related third-party investigation reports, have typically avoided the driver error explanation.[195]

In August 2010, The Wall Street Journal reported that experts at the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration had examined the "black boxes" of 58 vehicles involved in sudden-acceleration reports. The study found that in 35 of the cases, the brakes weren't applied at the time of the crash. In nine other cases in the same study, the brakes were used only at the last moment before impact.[226]

Factors leading to pedal misapplication edit

On March 10, 2010, The New York Times ran an opinion piece by Richard Schmidt, professor emeritus of psychology at University of California Los Angeles and sudden acceleration researcher, suspecting driver error as the primary cause of unexplained Toyota sudden acceleration reports.[227] Schmidt pointed to several factors that make driver error more likely: elderly driver age, lack of experience with the car, and short stature.[227] In addition, unexplained sudden acceleration events were most frequently reported as occurring at low speed or fully stopped.[227] Typically, the driver intended to press the brake, and did not consciously confuse the pedals; however, because of advanced age and neuromuscular irregularities, short stature and difficulty reaching the pedals, a slight misalignment in seating position, or unfamiliarity with the car model, the driver's foot contacted the accelerator by mistake.[227] The resulting unexpected sudden acceleration would lead to panic, with the driver thinking that the acceleration system had failed.[227] The immediate response would be to brake hard, but not knowing that their foot was on the accelerator, pressing down caused greater acceleration.[227] In such panic situations, the driver would think that the brakes were not responding, and continue pressing on the accelerator pedal until they crashed.[227] Switching to neutral or turning off the ignition was typically not contemplated.[227] Incidents occurred exclusively in automatic transmission-equipped cars[227] with driver complaints involving rental cars being far more frequent. All factors point to reduced driver familiarity and sophistication.

On March 12, 2010, Autoline Detroit argued that searches for additional vehicle defects were likely fruitless, as driver error was the primary cause of the 0.009 per million rate of Toyota sudden acceleration incidents from 1999 to 2009,[228] with "demographics and psychographics", namely elderly drivers and pedal misapplication as factors.[228] Also noted was that drivers with Type II diabetes (adult onset), which is more common among the elderly, are subject to reduced sensation in their lower extremities (peripheral neuropathy) with related impairment in positional knowledge of foot placement (proprioception).[228] Wired wrote that since investigators have been "unable to find evidence supporting drivers' claims their Toyotas suddenly raced out of control"[229] operator error is the most likely explanation.[229] However, victims and relatives of sudden acceleration cases are commonly unwilling to suspect involved loved ones, and blame the vehicle instead.[225] Analysis of alleged Toyota acceleration reports in The Atlantic and other sources have found the highest distribution of involved drivers between 70 and 80 years old, with the average age skewing over 55;[225][230] with elderly susceptibility to "neuronal misfiring" and pedal misapplication as a possible cause.[225] While many alleged cases lack exact details, over half of the reported incidents occurred from a complete stop or low speed, providing a window for the pedal misapplication to occur.[225] A prior GM study found that 60- and 70-year-olds were six times more likely to experience sudden acceleration than 20- to 30-year-olds.[227] In The New York Times, Richard Schmidt concluded that a brake override system could prevent acceleration cases where a vehicle defect existed, but would not prevent sudden acceleration cases caused by pedal misapplication.[227]

Previous findings of driver error edit

Car and Driver, Motor Trend, and Ward's Auto also compared the 2009-10 Toyota recalls to the Audi sudden acceleration cases of the 1980s, which led to a widely noted media frenzy and hundreds of sudden unintended acceleration claims for Audi cars.[14] In that case, a 1986 segment on CBS News' 60 Minutes accused the Audi 5000 sedan of unintended acceleration defects, which was followed by numerous reports of tragic accidents and media expert commentary.[17] At the time, Audi was reported to have the highest rate of acceleration complaints.[227] However, the NHTSA later determined all complaints to be due to driver error.[14][17][18]

The Detroit News documented previous sudden unintended acceleration cases dating back to August 1978 when the NHTSA opened an investigation into General Motors for sudden acceleration, concluding eight years later driver error was the likely culprit. By 1986, more than 2,000 injuries had been blamed on sudden acceleration with sudden acceleration complaints totaling over 10 percent of complaints filed to the NHTSA. In 1986 the NHTSA launched an investigation of the 1981-84 Toyota Cressida and an additional five other automakers. By 1989 the NHTSA determined driver error was "the most probable explanation" for the complaints.[231]

NHTSA and NASA Investigation Verdict edit

In February 2011, the findings of a 10-month-long study conducted by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), aimed to identify the main cause of sudden acceleration in Toyota and Lexus models. The study was requested by the U.S. Congress and "enlisted NASA engineers with expertise in areas such as computer-controlled electronic systems, electromagnetic interference, and software integrity".[232] The most common problem was drivers hitting the accelerator pedal when they thought they were hitting the brake, which the NHTSA called "pedal misapplication."[232] Of the 58 cases reported, 18 were dismissed out of hand. Of the remaining 40, 39 of them were found to have no cause; the remainder being an instance of "pedal entrapment." One investigator says most of the cases involved "pedal misapplication" – that is, "the driver stepped on the gas rather than the brake or in addition to the brake."[233] The report concluded that the two mechanical safety defects that were originally identified by NHTSA are known causes of dangerous unintended acceleration.[232]

Litigation edit

 
Toyota Motor Sales, U.S.A., Inc. headquarters in Torrance (within the Central District of California)

Consumers in the U.S. and Canada have filed numerous[234] class action lawsuits blaming the sudden acceleration problem on the electronic throttle control system (ETC) and alleging Toyota's negligence.[235][236] As of February 26, 2010, there were at least 72 lawsuits pending in U.S. federal courts against Toyota or its subsidiaries as a result of the 2009-10 recalls.[26][237] Plaintiffs are seeking damages for personal injury or wrongful death resulting from accidents in the defective Toyota vehicles (in other words, product liability), loss of resale value, or a drop in the value of shares held by Toyota shareholders.[26] Toyota has retained the law firm of Alston & Bird to defend most of these cases.[238]

On April 9, 2010, the U.S. Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation ordered consolidation of all federal actions into the Central District of California before Judge James V. Selna for all pretrial motions and discovery.[239] In doing so, the Panel noted that "these cases have attracted an unusual amount of publicity to the Panel's work."[239] Although only 11 cases were directly before the JPML, it also noted that the parties had notified it of more than 100 potentially related cases, which can also be consolidated as so-called "tag-along" cases.[239] As to why Judge Selna, the Panel explained, "Judge Selna's 28 years of private law practice at the very highest levels and in some of the most complex cases leaves him well prepared for a case of this magnitude."[239] Under federal multidistrict litigation law, any cases that are not dismissed or settled during the consolidated pretrial process will be remanded to their original district court for trial.

The following week, Judge Selna set a May 13 initial scheduling conference at his courtroom in Santa Ana, California.[240] He also appointed Cari Dawson, chairwoman of Alston & Bird's class action department, as lead counsel for defendants.

On May 14, after reviewing submissions from dozens of plaintiffs' attorneys, Judge Selna issued an order establishing which attorneys would be granted the potentially lucrative positions of lead counsel for the plaintiffs.[241] First, he named nine attorneys as lead counsel for the economic loss cases and nine attorneys as lead counsel for the personal injury and wrongful death cases.[241] He then named nine of the attorneys from these two panels to form a core discovery committee.[241] Three additional attorneys were named as liaisons to coordinate discovery with pending state court actions and other related federal litigation in progress outside of the MDL, like shareholder litigation.[241] Finally, one additional attorney was named as a consultant on behalf of international Toyota consumers.[241] Prominent attorneys appointed on the plaintiffs' side included Steve Berman of Hagens Berman Sobol Shapiro (on the personal injury and wrongful death committee) and Elizabeth Cabraser of Lieff Cabraser (on the economic loss committee).[241]

Selna also clarified the roles of defense counsel by appointing Cari Dawson and Lisa Gilford of Alston & Bird as lead counsel in the economic loss cases and Vince Galvin and Joel Smith of Bowman and Brooke as lead counsel in the personal injury and wrongful death cases.[241] Gilford and Galvin were also appointed to serve as lead defense liaisons to other related cases in federal and state courts.[241]

On June 1, 2010, Judge Selna issued another order setting out a discovery schedule. He ordered both sides to make initial discovery disclosures by July 2, 2010, and set out a briefing schedule for motions concerning the consolidated complaints, with oral arguments set for November 19, 2010. In a separate order on that same date, he also ordered that all motion-related documents filed by any attorney would now have to be co-signed by lead counsel for that attorney's side, and that lead counsel were to act as gatekeepers, to cut down on the number of documents being filed with the court. On July 1, 2010, Judge Selna appointed two retired Presiding Justices of the California Court of Appeal as special masters: John K. Trotter and Steven Stone.

On June 10, 2011, after the parties had completed some discovery, Judge Selna issued an order setting trial dates of February 19, 2013, and May 21, 2013, for the first two "bellwether" trials, and designated a Utah wrongful death/personal injury case as the first one (of 300 in progress) to go to trial.

Toyota has also been sued for not having a brake override system on older models.[101] Attorney Robert Nelson, representing Jacquelyn Donoghue of Holder, Nebraska, the 67-year-old widow of a man killed in an accident in which her model year 2006 Prius allegedly suddenly accelerated into another vehicle, killing the man and seriously injuring her, alleged that Toyota's failure to include a brake override on their models played a "direct role" in the death of John Donoghue.[101] Edgar Heiskell, an attorney involved with one of the lawsuits, contends that electromagnetic interference with the electronic throttle control system is to blame for acceleration cases.[124] Heiskell contends that Toyota models as old as 2002 are also affected. According to him, "Toyota can't tell you that the '07 Camry they are recalling is any different from the '06 or the '03 that has the same throttle control in it."[124] According to The Wall Street Journal's Holman W. Jenkins, Jr., "trial lawyers love the electronic gremlin theory because it's impossible to disprove in any individual case."[15]

On December 26, 2012, Toyota announced it would spend more than US$1 billion to settle a class action lawsuit involving unintended acceleration by retrofitting vehicles with safety devices and compensated owners for lost resale value.[242] A confidential settlement was reached in a lawsuit against Toyota involving the injury of Jean Bookout and the death of Barbara Schwarz in November 2013.[243]

Settlement with the U.S. government edit

On March 19, 2014, it was announced that Toyota and the U.S. Justice Department had reached an agreement whereby Toyota would pay a US$1.2 billion criminal penalty in exchange for deferred prosecution of wire fraud charges. The agreement also subjects the car company to further independent monitoring of its safety procedures. The penalty ended a four-year investigation in which the Justice Department concluded that Toyota had intentionally hidden information about safety defects from the public and had made deceptive statements to protect its brand image. Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr. remarked "Other car companies should not repeat Toyota's mistake. A recall may damage a company's reputation, but deceiving your customers makes that damage far more lasting." The penalty is the largest ever waged against a car company.[244]

In a statement, Toyota called the agreement difficult, but "a major step toward putting this unfortunate chapter behind us". The company said it has made fundamental changes in its corporate structure and safety procedures since the investigation started. Brake-override systems are now standard on all Toyota vehicles.[244]

As of March 2014, several civil wrongful death and personal injury lawsuits are pending.[244]

Other manufacturers edit

 
The number of NHTSA consumer complaints of unintended acceleration per 100,000 vehicles sold in the US for the 1999–2009 model years.[245]
 
Consumer complaints, unintended acceleration per 100,000 vehicles sold, 2008 MY[245]
 
Consumer complaints, unintended acceleration per 312,000 vehicles sold, 2008 MY.[246]

Toyota is not the only automobile manufacturer that has issued recalls for unintended acceleration problems. In December 2009, Consumer Reports analyzed 2008 model year NHTSA data for sudden acceleration among Toyota, Ford, Chrysler, GM, Honda, and Nissan, finding 52 complaints involving Toyota vehicles or 41% of complaints among these makes,[247] and every other major car maker is affected.[193][248] Consumer Reports noted that the media publicity around Toyota led to an increase in complaints for 2008 models.[249] In February 2010, National Public Radio obtained the full NHTSA database of 15,000 unintended acceleration complaints over the past decade, and determined that among all manufacturers, Volkswagen had the highest rate of unintended acceleration complaints in 2009 and 2008 (11.5 and 21.6 per 100,000 vehicles respectively), while Suzuki had the highest rate in 2007 and 2006 (27.4 and 24.9 per 100,000 vehicles respectively).[245] Toyota had 7.5, 6.8, 15.2, and 9.7 complaints per 100,000 vehicles in those years.[245] According to NPR's analysis of the NHTSA database, Jaguar, Volvo, and Honda also had high complaints depending on year.[245][250]

In February 2010, Edmunds.com released its findings on a review of all NHTSA complaints from 2001 to the present day, conducted in light of the Toyota recall crisis. The review found that despite the recall, during the previous decade Toyota ranked 17th among the 20 major car makes in number of complaints per vehicles sold, with a lower rate of customer complaints from its U.S. customers than the Detroit Big Three, along with Honda, Subaru, Hyundai, Nissan, Isuzu, Suzuki, Mazda, Mitsubishi, Volvo, Volkswagen, and BMW.[251][252] Edmunds.com also noted that any individual can file a NHTSA complaint without providing a Vehicle Identification Number (VIN),[175] which can lead to misleading statistics as "not all NHTSA complaints are created equal" and range from legitimate to nonsensical.[13] On June 5, 2010, NHTSA shut down online access to its complaint database following revelations of redundant, unverifiable entries and improperly secured personal data.[253]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b (Press release). Toyota. 2009-09-29. Archived from the original on 2009-12-21.
  2. ^ a b c d e f . Reuters. 2010-02-09. Archived from the original on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2012-09-09.
  3. ^ a b c (Press release). Toyota. 2010-01-21. Archived from the original on 2010-01-30.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h (Press release). Toyota. 2009-11-25. Archived from the original on 2009-12-21.
  5. ^ a b c d "Toyota Begins Interim Notification to Owners Regarding Future Voluntary Safety Recall Related to Floor Mats" (Press release). Toyota USA Newsroom. 2009-11-02. from the original on 2010-02-13. Retrieved 2010-02-02.
  6. ^ a b Ramsey, Jonathon (2010-01-25). "Don't Forget Me! January 25, 2010, Web site. Retrieved January 29, 2010". Autoblog.com. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  7. ^ a b c d "Toyota recalls 'up to 1.8 million cars'". BBC. 2010-01-30. from the original on 2010-01-31. Retrieved 2010-01-29.
  8. ^ a b Haq, Husna (2010-01-29). "Toyota recall update: dealers face full lots, anxious customers". The Christian Science Monitor. from the original on 2010-02-02. Retrieved 2010-01-30.
  9. ^ a b c (Press release). Toyota. 2010-01-26. Archived from the original on 2010-02-11.
  10. ^ Healey, James R. (2010-02-17). "Toyota deaths reported to safety database rise to 37". USA Today. Retrieved 2011-02-11.
  11. ^ Berzon, Alexandra; Kahn, Gabriel (2010-03-10). "Toyota Complaints Surged After First Recall". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 2011-02-11.
  12. ^ a b "On State of the Union Week, It's All About Obama". Journalism.org. from the original on 10 March 2011. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  13. ^ a b Hellwig, Ed (2010-02-18). "The Complaints NHTSA Doesn't Want You to See". Blogs.insideline.com. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  14. ^ a b c d e Editorial By Drew Winter. . Wardsdealer.com. Archived from the original on 2010-12-26. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  15. ^ a b c Jenkins, Holman W. (2010-02-24). "My Sudden Acceleration Nightmare". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 2011-02-11.
  16. ^ a b c Oberman, Mira (2010-02-03). "AFP: Is US bullying Toyota on recall?". Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  17. ^ a b c d e f "Toyota Recall: Scandal, Media Circus, and Stupid Drivers". Caranddriver.com. 4 February 2010. Retrieved 2011-03-03. it's critical to note that the lack of such a throttle kill isn't a defect. It isn't Toyota's responsibility to account for every possible stupid thing people might do in a car.
  18. ^ a b c d "Wild, Out Of Control Toyotas? Baloney". Blogs.motortrend.com. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  19. ^ "Why it's so hard for Toyota to find out what's wrong with its vehicles". The Washington Post. Retrieved 2011-02-11.
  20. ^ a b c d e f Linebaugh, Kate (2010-02-25). . The Wall Street Journal. Archived from the original on 2012-01-18. Retrieved 2011-02-11.
  21. ^ "Toyota Fires Back: Electronics Don't Rewire Themselves". Popular Mechanics. Retrieved 2011-03-03.[permanent dead link]
  22. ^ . Left Lane News. Archived from the original on 2010-12-08. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  23. ^ Jackson, Kathy (2010-03-08). "Toyota: Fixes are working on recalled vehicles". Automotive News. Retrieved 2012-01-11.
  24. ^ a b Isidore, Chris (2010-02-02). "U.S. probes electronics in Toyota recall". CNNMoney.com. Retrieved 2011-02-11.
  25. ^ a b c d e Ahrens, Frank (2010-03-09). "Toyota demo counters claim of electronic acceleration glitch". The Washington Post. Retrieved 2011-02-11.
  26. ^ a b c McEvoy, Claran (2010-02-26). "As Toyota Suits Mount, Lawyers Seek Control of Litigation Location". San Francisco Daily Journal.
  27. ^ . Bloomberg BusinessWeek. 2011-02-08. Archived from the original on February 11, 2011. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  28. ^ Jones, Ashby (2011-02-09). "Oh What a Feeling! Study Pins Acceleration Blame on Drivers – Law Blog". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  29. ^ a b "DOT: No Electronic Sudden Acceleration in Toyotas". ABC News. 2011-02-08. Retrieved 2012-09-09.
  30. ^ Barr, Michael. "Barr's testimonial slides" (PDF). Safety Research.
  31. ^ Baker, Phil (2013-11-04). . San Diego Source. Archived from the original on 2014-02-20. Retrieved 2014-01-24.
  32. ^ Yoshida, Junko (2013-10-23). . EE Times. Archived from the original on 2017-09-18. Retrieved 2014-01-24.
  33. ^ Barrett, Paul M. (2013-12-16). . Business Week. Bloomberg. Archived from the original on December 16, 2013. Retrieved 2014-01-24.
  34. ^ a b c . Caranddriver.com. Archived from the original on 2010-03-23. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  35. ^ Valdes-Dapena, Peter (2010-01-27). "Toyota recalls top 5.3 million vehicles". CNN. Retrieved 2011-02-11.
  36. ^ "Recall Alert: 2010 Toyota Camry – KickingTires". Blogs.cars.com. 2010-02-09. from the original on 2010-06-18. Retrieved 2010-05-22.
  37. ^ "Recall Alert: 2010 Toyota Tacoma – KickingTires". Blogs.cars.com. from the original on 2010-05-24. Retrieved 2010-05-22.
  38. ^ "2010 Toyota Tacoma Recalls and Notices List". Retrieved 2021-08-03.
  39. ^ "Toyota Vehicles: Toyota to Begin Voluntary Safety Recall on Certain 1998–2010 Model Year Siennas to Address Potential Corrosion on Spare Tire Cable" (Press release). Toyota Motor Sales USA. 2010-04-16. from the original on 2010-05-23. Retrieved 2010-05-22.
  40. ^ a b c (Press release). Toyota Motor Sales USA. Archived from the original on 2010-05-25. Retrieved 2010-05-22.
  41. ^ . New York Post. Archived from the original on 2011-11-06. Retrieved 2012-09-09.
  42. ^ "Toyota Vehicles: Customer FAQs for 2003 Toyota Sequoia Recall" (Press release). Toyota Motor Sales USA. Retrieved 2010-05-22.[permanent dead link]
  43. ^ Alabaster, Jay (2010-05-21). . Associated Press. Archived from the original on 2010-05-24.
  44. ^ [Beginning of the week Lexus recal due to Toyota Engine Parts]. The Wall Street Journal (in Japanese). 2010-07-02. Archived from the original on 2011-07-27. Retrieved 2011-02-11.
  45. ^ "Toyota recall: Avalons, Lexuses have steering problems". The Christian Science Monitor. from the original on 2010-08-01. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  46. ^ (Press release). Toyota Motor Sales USA. Archived from the original on 2009-11-22. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  47. ^ a b c Vartabedian, Ralph (2011-02-09). "Sudden acceleration: Sudden acceleration in Toyota vehicles is a mechanical issue not electronic, U.S. study finds". Los Angeles Times. from the original on 3 March 2011. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  48. ^ MSNBC. 2011-02-24. Archived from the original on 2011-02-26. Retrieved 2011-04-23.
  49. ^ Brennan, Reilly (2009-11-04). "Runaway Toyotas: Fact Or Fiction?". Autoblog. Retrieved 2015-05-28.
  50. ^ "4 Killed In Fiery Santee Crash Believed Identified". 10News. 2009-08-28. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  51. ^ Charette, Robert (2009-10-18). "How Hard Should It Be To Stop a Runaway Luxury Car?". IEEE Spectrum Risk Factor Blog. from the original on 2010-02-11. Retrieved 2010-01-30.
  52. ^ "Lexus Crash: An Avoidable Tragedy". AOL Auto. 2009-12-10.
  53. ^ "911 Call Released from Crash that Prompted Initial Toyota/Lexus Floor Mat Recall". cardealerreviews.org. February 2010. Retrieved 2011-08-15.
  54. ^ a b c Bensinger, Ken; Vartabedian, Ralph (2009-10-25). "New details in crash that prompted Toyota recall". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2011-02-11.
  55. ^ "Toyota 911 Crash Official Accident Report from Carquestions". Retrieved January 25, 2024 – via www.youtube.com.
  56. ^ a b Baker, Debbi; Davis, Kristina (2009-12-04). "Prior driver of Lexus says pedal stuck". U-T San Diego. Retrieved 2012-08-06.
  57. ^ "FR Doc E9-26265". Edocket.access.gpo.gov. Retrieved 2010-05-22.
  58. ^ (PDF) (Press release). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2009-11-22. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  59. ^ "Toyota Executive Denies 'Cover Up' In Probe of Runaway Cars". ABC News. 2009-11-05. Retrieved 2012-09-09.
  60. ^ . NHTSA (Press release). November 4, 2009. Archived from the original on March 5, 2013. Retrieved 5 November 2020.
  61. ^ "Recall information". Toyota Motor Sales USA. from the original on 2010-02-09. Retrieved 2010-02-06.
  62. ^ Rutherford, Simon (2010-02-01). "Pedal Recall: Your frequently asked questions". blog.toyota.co.uk. from the original on 2010-02-04. Retrieved 2010-02-06.
  63. ^ Mayounga, André T. (2018-10-23). "Antecedents of recalls prevention: analysis and synthesis of research on product recalls". Supply Chain Forum. 19 (3): 164–177. doi:10.1080/16258312.2018.1530575. S2CID 169860121.
  64. ^ . Nhtsa.dot.gov. Archived from the original on 2012-09-16. Retrieved 2012-09-09.
  65. ^ a b "Toyota Adds Brake Override System To All Models After Recall". Retrieved 2011-02-11.
  66. ^ . Ntdaily.com. 2010-02-02. Archived from the original on 2011-07-17. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  67. ^ . Nhtsa.dot.gov. Archived from the original on 2012-09-16. Retrieved 2012-09-09.
  68. ^ Linebaugh, Kate (2010-01-31). "Toyota Gas-Pedal Fix Clears Regulators". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 2011-02-11.
  69. ^ "Toyota opens up about pedal recall, shares strategy for fix". USA Today. 2010-02-02. Retrieved 2011-02-11.
  70. ^ . Consumer Reports. 2010-01-29. Archived from the original on 2010-02-02. Retrieved 2020-11-04.
  71. ^ "Massive Toyota recall extended to Europe, China". Canada: CTV. 2010-01-28.
  72. ^ a b Webster, Tom. "Toyota to recall eight models in Europe". Autoblog.com. from the original on 2010-02-03. Retrieved 2010-01-29.
  73. ^ . Toyota UK. 1990-01-06. Archived from the original on 2010-06-11. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  74. ^ "Peugeot follows Toyota in car recall". BBC. 2010-01-30. from the original on 2010-01-31. Retrieved 2010-01-30.
  75. ^ a b "Toyota car recall may cost $2bn". BBC. 2010-02-02. from the original on 2010-02-03. Retrieved 2010-02-02.
  76. ^ . 2010-02-03. Archived from the original on 2010-03-13. Retrieved 2010-02-04.
  77. ^ . Aiw1.uspto.gov. Archived from the original on 2016-12-30. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  78. ^ . Toyota Motor Sales USA. 2010-02-03. Archived from the original on 2010-07-10. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  79. ^ . Plasticsnews.com. Archived from the original on 2011-07-15. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  80. ^ "CTS Corporation". Ctscorp.com. from the original on 2011-01-29. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  81. ^ (Press release). Ctscorp.com. 2010-01-29. Archived from the original on 2011-07-08. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  82. ^ . Bloomberg BusinessWeek. 2010-06-04. Archived from the original on June 5, 2010. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  83. ^ Sheehan, Tim (2010-01-29). "Toyota recall boosts rival dealers in Valley". The Fresno Bee. Archived from the original on 2013-01-23. Retrieved 2010-01-30.
  84. ^ Krisher, Tom; Thomas, Ken (2010-01-29). "Toyota doesn't know when pedal repairs can be made". The Seattle Times. Associated Press, Consumer Reports, Toyota. from the original on 2010-02-02. Retrieved 2010-01-30.
  85. ^ Vartabedian, Ralph; Bensinger, Ken (2009-11-08). . Los Angeles Times. Archived from the original on 2009-11-11. Retrieved 2010-01-30.
  86. ^ a b c "How To Deal With Unintended Acceleration – Tech Dept". Caranddriver.com. 31 December 2009. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  87. ^ . Bloomberg BusinessWeek. 2010-02-09. Archived from the original on February 13, 2010. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  88. ^ a b "2010 Toyota Camry Stuck-Throttle Brake Test". Insideline.com. 2010-03-16. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  89. ^ a b c "TÜV-Test Toyotas stoppen auch mit klemmendem Gaspedal". Focus.de. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  90. ^ . Blogs.consumerreports.org. 2010-02-03. Archived from the original on 2010-04-13. Retrieved 2010-05-22.
  91. ^ . Archived from the original on 2010-02-06.
  92. ^ "Toyota receives complaints over Prius brakes". BBC. 2010-02-03. from the original on 2010-02-04. Retrieved 2010-02-03.
  93. ^ LeBeau, Phil (2010-02-03). . CNBC. Archived from the original on 2011-06-10. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  94. ^ . Yahoo. Associated Press. 2010-02-04. Archived from the original on 2010-02-05. Retrieved 2020-11-05.
  95. ^ . NHTSA. 2020-02-04. Archived from the original on 2012-09-16. Retrieved 2020-11-05.
  96. ^ Isidore, Chris (2010-02-04). "Feds probing Prius brakes". CNNMoney.com. from the original on 2010-02-07. Retrieved 2010-02-04.
  97. ^ "NHTSA memo on regenerative braking". www.thedetroitbureau.com. 2009-12-24. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  98. ^ "Toyota 'planning recall of Prius' in US and Japan". BBC. 2010-02-07. from the original on 2010-02-08. Retrieved 2010-02-07.
  99. ^ Tabuchi, Hiroko (2010-02-07). "Toyota Is to Recall 2010 Prius Model Cars for Brakes". The New York Times. Retrieved 2012-09-09.
  100. ^ "Toyota receives grand jury subpoena for documents". Toledo Blade. AP. 2010-02-22. Retrieved 2020-11-05.
  101. ^ a b c Sforza, Teri (2010-02-08). "Lawsuit seeks class-action status over Toyota Prius problems". Orange County Register. Retrieved 2012-09-09.
  102. ^ "Newsroom: Toyota Announces Voluntary Recall on 2010 Model-Year Prius and 2010 Lexus HS 250h Vehicles to Update ABS Software" (Press release). Toyota Motor Sales USA. 2010-02-08. Retrieved 2011-01-30.[permanent dead link]
  103. ^ "Toyota Vehicles: Toyota Announces Voluntary Recall on 8,000 2010 Model Year Tacoma 4WD Trucks to Inspect the Front Drive Shaft" (Press release). Toyota Motor Sales USA. 2010-02-12. from the original on 4 June 2010. Retrieved 2010-05-22.
  104. ^ "Update 2: Recall Alert: 2010 Toyota Tacoma". News.pickuptrucks.com. from the original on 2010-05-21. Retrieved 2010-05-22.
  105. ^ . MSNBC. 2010-03-09. Archived from the original on 14 March 2010. Retrieved 2010-03-09.
  106. ^ a b Mukai, Anna; Hagiwara, Yuki (10 October 2012). "Toyota Recalls 7.43 Million Vehicles on Faulty Window Switch". Bloomberg L.P. Retrieved 10 October 2012.
  107. ^ "Toyota Told by Japan to Investigate Prius on Brakes (Update1)". Bloomberg BusinessWeek. 2010-02-03. Retrieved 2010-05-22.[dead link]
  108. ^ O'Donnell, Jayne (2010-03-16). "Toyota careful not to blame drivers in sudden acceleration". USA Today. Retrieved 2011-02-11.
  109. ^ "Tribulations at Toyota: The Search for the Gas Pedal Flaw". Der Spiegel. 2010-03-09. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  110. ^ Ross, Brian; Rhee, Joseph; Sandholm, Drew (2010-01-21). "Toyota Recall: Reports of Runaway Car". ABC News. Retrieved 2020-11-05.
  111. ^ "Claims hard to prove, disprove in Toyota suits". The Detroit News. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  112. ^ "Toyota faces new US investigation". BBC News. 2010-02-18. Retrieved 2011-02-11.
  113. ^ Raum, Tom; Manning, Stephen (2010-02-23). "Toyota recalls won't 'totally' fix sudden surges". Boston Globe. Retrieved 2010-05-22.
  114. ^ . Yahoo. AP. 2010-03-17. Archived from the original on 2010-03-23. Retrieved 2020-11-05.
  115. ^ a b . Fox40.com. Archived from the original on 2011-07-24. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  116. ^ "Toyota Prius could be banned". The Foreigner. Norway. Retrieved 2010-05-22.
  117. ^ "Police indict Toyota Prius driver". The Foreigner. Norway. 2010-03-29. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  118. ^ a b "Toyota Creates Rapid Response System (For Public Relations, Anyway)". Thecarconnection.com. 2010-04-12. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  119. ^ Struck, Mary (2010-04-16). . The Kohler Villager. Archived from the original on 2011-08-10. Retrieved 2011-06-13.
  120. ^ a b Bensinger, Ken; Vartabedian, Ralph (2009-11-29). "Data point to Toyota's throttles, not floor mats". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2010-01-30.
  121. ^ (Press release). Toyota Motor Sales USA. 2009-11-06. Archived from the original on 2009-11-10. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  122. ^ a b c d e Hyde, Justin (2010-01-31). "Toyota safety recalls were years in the making". Detroit Free Press/USA Today. Retrieved 2011-02-11.
  123. ^ Shunk, Chris (2020-02-05). "After NHTSA investigator hired by Toyota, serious unintended acceleration cases ignored". Autoblog. Retrieved 2020-11-05.
  124. ^ a b c Gardner, Greg (2009-01-28). "Wider brake fix is urged". Detroit Free Press. (PDF) from the original on May 25, 2010. Retrieved 2010-01-30.
  125. ^ Department of Transportation: National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) (2009-11-02). "Denial of Motor Vehicle Defect Petition". Federal Register. 74 (210). Retrieved 2020-11-05.
  126. ^ "Official: State Farm warned NHTSA on Toyota in '07". Reuters. 2010-02-08. Retrieved 2011-02-11.
  127. ^ "Ford Fusion, Mercury Milan Go Under Recall Investigation for Floor Mats". Wot.motortrend.com. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  128. ^ Mitchell, Josh (2010-06-30). "Regulators Haven't Found Electronic Defects In Toyotas". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 2011-02-11.
  129. ^ "Toyota cleared of all sudden acceleration claims". The Gazette. Montreal. from the original on 2010-07-24. Retrieved 2010-07-14.
  130. ^ a b Evans, Scott. . Automobile Magazine. Archived from the original on 17 July 2010. Retrieved 2010-07-14.
  131. ^ a b Ramsey, Mike (2010-07-30). "Release of Toyota Documents Blocked, Ex-Official Says". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 2010-07-30.
  132. ^ "U.S. Department of Transportation Releases Results from NHTSA-NASA Study of Unintended Acceleration in Toyota Vehicles | National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA)". Nhtsa.gov. Archived from the original on 2015-11-10. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  133. ^ "NHTSA report clears up mystery – and hysteria – on Toyota cars". The Washington Post. 2011-02-08. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  134. ^ "NASA – NASA's Toyota Study Released by Dept. of Transportation". Nasa.gov. 2011-02-08. from the original on 16 March 2011. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  135. ^ . Nhtsa.gov. Archived from the original on 2011-03-20. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  136. ^ a b . Asahi Shimbun. Archived from the original on 2010-04-06. Retrieved 2020-11-05.
  137. ^ Valdes-Dapena, Peter (2010-02-23). "Witnesses: Toyota problems could be electronics". CNN. from the original on 28 March 2010. Retrieved 2010-04-23.
  138. ^ . MSNBC. 2010-02-22. Archived from the original on 29 January 2011. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  139. ^ "Clarification of Testimony Regarding Effectiveness of Recalls" (Press release). Toyota Motor Sales USA. Retrieved 2012-09-09.
  140. ^ "Toyota president Akio Toyoda's statement to Congress". The Guardian. London. 2010-02-24. Retrieved 2011-02-11.
  141. ^ Stephen Manning and Tom Raum, Associated Press Writers (2010-03-02). "US may require accelerator override in new cars". The Seattle Times. Associated Press. from the original on 2013-07-28. Retrieved 2012-09-09.
  142. ^ Lichtblau, Eric (2010-02-23). "Lawmakers' Ties to Toyota Questioned at Start of Inquiries". The New York Times. Retrieved 2010-04-23.
  143. ^ "Thirty-one House Dems quizzing Toyota execs got UAW campaign cash". Retrieved 2011-03-03.[permanent dead link]
  144. ^ . Wthr.com. Archived from the original on 2010-02-21. Retrieved 2010-05-22.
  145. ^ Three state governors (2010-02-10). (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-10-06. Retrieved 2010-12-01.
  146. ^ Toyota recall and sales suspension, Owram, Kristine, The Canadian Press, January 27, 2010
  147. ^ Maynard, Micheline (2010-02-03). "Stop Driving Recalled Toyotas, Says Agency Chief". USA Today. from the original on 4 February 2010. Retrieved 2010-02-03.
  148. ^ a b . Financialpost.com. Archived from the original on 2010-02-06. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  149. ^ "Recall U.S. Interests In Auto Industry". Forbes. 2010-02-08. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  150. ^ a b Allen, Katie (2010-01-28). "Toyota to axe 750 British jobs". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 2010-01-29.
  151. ^ "Toyota Recall – The Deep Root of the Problem". Wordpress.com. Retrieved 2010-02-25.
  152. ^ "Toyota shares fall for 6th day as recall woes deepen". The Guardian. London. 2008-05-07. Retrieved 2010-01-31.
  153. ^ Recall difficulties affecting resale value of used Toyota-brand vehicles[permanent dead link], Kristine Owram, The Canadian Press, 2010-01-27
  154. ^ Woodyard, Chris (2010-02-05). "Toyota recalls will cost owners in lower resale values". USA Today. Retrieved 2011-02-11.
  155. ^ a b (Press release). March 30, 2011. Archived from the original on 2012-08-16. Retrieved 2012-09-09.
  156. ^ a b Kageyama, Yuri (2010-02-15). "Recall shows new challenges for 'Toyota Way' – Automotive Industry". NZ Herald News. Retrieved 2010-08-06.
  157. ^ "GM makes bid for Toyota customers". The Detroit News. Archived from the original on September 10, 2012. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  158. ^ . Blog.caranddriver.com. Archived from the original on 2010-02-06. Retrieved 2010-05-22.
  159. ^ Mary Lynn Smith (2010-02-10). . Star Tribune. Archived from the original on 2011-06-06. Retrieved 2010-06-04.
  160. ^ The Associated Press via KSTP-TV (2010-05-13). "Defense exam of Camry finds throttle problems". Hubbard Broadcasting Company. from the original on 1 June 2010. Retrieved 2010-06-04.
  161. ^ Susanna Song and Katie Lynn for KSTP-TV (2010-05-26). "Man Convicted of Deadly Toyota Crash Hopes New Evidence Will Set Him Free". Hubbard Broadcasting Company. from the original on 28 May 2010. Retrieved 2010-06-04.
  162. ^ The Associated Press via KSTP-TV (2010-03-09). . Hubbard Broadcasting Company. Archived from the original on 2011-09-27. Retrieved 2010-06-10.
  163. ^ Gurnon, Emily (2010-06-04). "Victim sues over 2006 Toyota crash in St. Paul". The Pioneer Press. Media New Group. Retrieved 2010-06-10.
  164. ^ Chapman, Reg (2010-06-06). . CBS Broadcasting. Archived from the original on 2010-06-08. Retrieved 2010-06-10.
  165. ^ Gurnon, Emily (2010-06-30). "Ramsey County attorney: Koua Fong Lee does not deserve new trial in fatal Toyota crash". The Pioneer Press. Media New Group. Retrieved 2010-07-05.
  166. ^ Lohn, Martiga (2010-08-05). . MSNBC. Archived from the original on 2010-08-06. Retrieved 2010-12-01.
  167. ^ "Minnesota judge frees man convicted in acceleration crash of Toyota". CNN. 2010-08-06. Retrieved 2011-02-11.
  168. ^ "With Budget as Backdrop, Economy Leads the News". Journalism.org. 2011-02-06. from the original on 10 March 2011. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  169. ^ Jim Burress (2010-02-10). . Publicbroadcasting.net. Archived from the original on 2011-06-06. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  170. ^ Fallah, Alborz (2010-02-22). "Toyota Recall Reactions – Fair or a witch hunt?". Caradvice.com.au. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  171. ^ a b . Autoweek.com. Archived from the original on 2011-06-22. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  172. ^ Wallace, Ed (2010-02-11). . Bloomberg BusinessWeek. Archived from the original on February 13, 2010. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  173. ^ . Popularmechanics.com. 2010-02-09. Archived from the original on 2010-02-13. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  174. ^ "Terence Corcoran: More evidence of media thuggery against Toyota". National Post. Retrieved 2011-03-03.[dead link]
  175. ^ a b Schmitt, Bertel. "89 Dead In The NHTSA Complaint Database? It's A Sham". The Truth about Cars. from the original on 5 June 2010. Retrieved 2010-06-25.
  176. ^ Fumento, Michael (2010-07-22). "Why Didn't the Media Do a Better Job on Toyota". Forbes. from the original on 25 July 2010. Retrieved 2010-07-20.
  177. ^ "Toyota, U.S. officials investigate runaway Prius". Reuters. March 9, 2010. Retrieved 2012-09-09.
  178. ^ "Runaway Prius? More like runaway media hype". Marketwatch.com. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  179. ^ "Runaway Media Hype in Toyota Prius Crash: Despite Media Reports, Cars Never Touched". Cardealerreviews.org. 1999-02-22. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  180. ^ a b c . Fox40.com. 2010-03-11. Archived from the original on 2011-07-24. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  181. ^ a b Fumento, Michael (2010-03-12). . Forbes. Archived from the original on March 16, 2010. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  182. ^ . Ridelust.com. Archived from the original on 2011-07-15. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  183. ^ Hellwig, Ed (2010-03-09). . Blogs.insideline.com. Archived from the original on 2010-11-21. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  184. ^ "Report: Probe Questions Account of Runaway Prius". ABC News. 2010-03-13. from the original on 19 February 2011. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  185. ^ "Runaway Prius Probe Can't Verify Story". CBS News. 2010-03-14. from the original on 4 February 2011. Retrieved 2011-02-11.
  186. ^ "59% Still Hold Favorable View of Toyota – Rasmussen Reports". Rasmussenreports.com. 2010-02-08. Retrieved 2010-05-22.
  187. ^ "23% Say Government Criticizing Toyota To Help GM – Rasmussen Reports". Rasmussenreports.com. 2010-02-12. Retrieved 2010-05-22.
  188. ^ a b Dolan, Matthew (2010-02-13). "Outspoken Researcher Turns Focus to Toyota". The Wall Street Journal. from the original on 9 March 2011. Retrieved 2011-02-11.
  189. ^ a b "Toyota Recall Fails to Address 'Root Cause' of Many Sudden Acceleration Cases, Safety Expert Says". ABC News. from the original on 22 January 2011. Retrieved 2011-02-11.
  190. ^ Detroit Free Press. January 31, 2010.
  191. ^ . Safetyresearch.net. 2010-02-05. Archived from the original on 2010-12-30. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  192. ^ a b Bensinger, Ken (2010-01-22). "Toyota issues new recall for 2.3 million vehicles". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2011-02-11.
  193. ^ a b Ashley, Steven (2010-01-28). "What Might Cause a Gas Pedal to Become Stuck?". Scientific American. Retrieved 2010-01-30.
  194. ^ a b McElroy, John (2010-02-24). "Unintended Acceleration? Beware of TV Network Fraud". Autoblog.com. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  195. ^ a b "Toyota Situation Provides Great Opportunity for America to Examine the Frivolous Lawsuit Epidemic". Theautochannel.com. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  196. ^ Greg Gardner (2010-02-01). . Detroit Free Press. Archived from the original on February 3, 2010. Retrieved 2011-02-11.
  197. ^ "Cosmic Rays may be Causing Unintended Acceleration in Toyotas". U.S. News & World Report. March 17, 2010.
  198. ^ "Exponent home page". Exponent. from the original on 24 March 2010. Retrieved 2010-03-09.
  199. ^ Linebaugh, Kate (2010-02-14). "Toyota Study Finds No Electronics Problem". The Wall Street Journal. from the original on 18 April 2010. Retrieved 2010-05-22.
  200. ^ a b c Bensinger, Ken; Vartabedian, Ralph (2010-02-18). "Toyota calls in Exponent Inc. as hired gun". Los Angeles Times. from the original on 2010-02-23. Retrieved 2010-03-09.
  201. ^ a b c d e O'Donnell, Jayne; Manning, Stephen (2010-03-08). "Toyota disputes critic who blames electronics". USA Today. Associated Press. Retrieved 2012-09-09.
  202. ^ a b . Bloomberg BusinessWeek. 2010-03-04. Archived from the original on 16 April 2011. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  203. ^ Ailworth, Erin (2011-02-09). "US finds Toyota electronics weren't to blame in crashes – The Boston Globe". Boston. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  204. ^ O'Flynn, Colin (January 1, 2021). "Finding a $Billion Dollar Fault Mode". Circuit Cellar. Retrieved June 11, 2021.
  205. ^ "Toyota Recall: Electronic Design Flaw Linked to Toyota Runaway Acceleration Problems, Expert Says". ABC News. 2010-02-22. Retrieved 2010-05-22.
  206. ^ a b Abuelsamid, Sam (2010-02-23). "Analysis: ABC News report shouldn't panic Toyota drivers". Autoblog. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  207. ^ a b c "ABC Attacks Toyota, Support for Akio Toyoda Weakens, Beware of Network Fraud". Autoline Detroit. 2010-02-23. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  208. ^ a b c "The Mechanics of ABC News' Unintended Toyota Acceleration Hoax". Jalopnik.com. 2010-03-08. Retrieved 2012-01-12.
  209. ^ . Autoweek. 2010-11-03. Archived from the original on 2011-06-22. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  210. ^ "Breaking: ABC News Admits to Faking Part of Toyota Acceleration Video". Autoguide.com. 2010-03-11. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  211. ^ a b c . Gawker. 2010-03-05. Archived from the original on 2011-10-11. Retrieved 2012-01-12.
  212. ^ a b Bauder, David (2010-03-11). . ABC News. New York. Archived from the original on 2013-07-28. Retrieved 2013-01-19.
  213. ^ . Gawker.com. 2010-03-05. Archived from the original on 2010-03-07. Retrieved 2012-01-12.
  214. ^ Adrian Kingsley-Hughes (2010-02-04). "Toyota's Prius problems: Software, hardware and the future of motoring". ZDNet. Retrieved 2011-02-11.
  215. ^ Mitchell, Robert L. (5 February 2010). . Computerworld. Archived from the original on 21 February 2011. Retrieved 11 February 2011.
  216. ^ a b c d e f "Pentagon Prepares For End of Gay Ban; Has Toyota Found Fix?". The Situation Room. CNN. Retrieved 2011-02-11.
  217. ^ a b c "Is Wozniak Wrong About Prius?". Fox News Channel. 2010-02-03. Retrieved 2011-02-11.
  218. ^ "Steve Wozniak Admits He Doesn't Know How To Use Cruise Control... Kind of". Priuschat. 2010-02-03. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  219. ^ Christina Zdanowicz and Wayne Drash (2010-02-11). "Prius owners blame wild rides on cruise control". CNN. Retrieved 2011-02-11.
  220. ^ Schweinsberg, Christie (2010-03-22). . Wardsauto.com. Archived from the original on 2011-07-17. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  221. ^ "Recall U.S. Interests In Auto Industry". Forbes. 2010-02-08. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  222. ^ Leonard Evans (2010-02-04). . Aolnews.com. Archived from the original on February 6, 2010. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  223. ^ Michael Fumento, Why Do Toyotas Hate the Elderly? 2010-06-02 at the Wayback Machine
  224. ^ Megan McArdle, "How Real are the Defects in Toyota's Cars?", The Atlantic, March 12, 2010; Theodore H. Frank, "I am not afraid of my Toyota Prius", The Washington Examiner, March 11, 2010; Walter Olson, "Exorcising Toyota's Demons" 2010-03-16 at the Wayback Machine, National Review Online, March 15, 2010; Carl Franzen, "Has Toyota Coverage Driven Public a Bit Crazy?" 2010-03-15 at the Wayback Machine, AOL News, March 12, 2010.
  225. ^ a b c d e "How Real are the Defects in Toyota's Cars?". The Atlantic. 2010-03-12. from the original on 2 March 2011. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  226. ^ Ramsey, Mike (2010-08-11). "U.S. Study Points to Driver Error in Many Toyota Crashes". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 2011-02-11.
  227. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Schmidt, Richard A. (2010-03-11). "Braking Bad". The New York Times. Retrieved 2011-02-11.
  228. ^ a b c McElroy, John (2010-03-12). "Runaway Toyotas? What about driver error?". Autoblog.com. Retrieved 2011-06-13.
  229. ^ a b Paur, Jason (2010-03-12). "Operator Error Usually The Cause of Unintended Acceleration In Past Investigations". Wired. Retrieved 2011-06-13.
  230. ^ "Toyota Sudden Acceleration: Is It All Older Drivers' Fault?". Thecarconnection.com. 2010-03-15. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  231. ^ "Runaway vehicle issue lingers". The Detroit News. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  232. ^ a b c "U.S. Department of Transportation Releases Results from NHTSA-NASA Study of Unintended Acceleration in Toyota Vehicles". National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. 2011-02-08. Archived from the original on 2015-11-10. Retrieved 2011-06-12.
  233. ^ Keane, Angela Greiling; Ohnsman, Alan (2011-02-08). . Bloomberg BusinessWeek. Archived from the original on February 12, 2011. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  234. ^ "Toyota Recall Lawsuits". FindLaw. 2010-02-11. from the original on 16 February 2010. Retrieved 2010-02-11.
  235. ^ . Bloomberg/Business Week. 2010-01-29. Archived from the original on February 2, 2010. Retrieved 2011-02-11.
  236. ^ Fisk, Margaret Cronin (2010-02-01). "Toyota Faces New Class-Action Suits Over Acceleration". Bloomberg. Retrieved 2011-02-11.
  237. ^ "Toyota SUA Victims Call for Comprehensive Recalls" (Press release). California. PR Newswire. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  238. ^ Amanda Bronstad, "Plaintiffs Lawyers Jockey for Venue in Massive Toyota Litigation," The National Law Journal, 11 March 2010.
  239. ^ a b c d "Transfer Order In re: Toyota Motor Corp. Unintended Acceleration Marketing, Sales Practices, and Products Liability Litigation, MDL No. 2151" (PDF). Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation. US. 2010-04-09.[dead link]
  240. ^ Bronstad, Amanda (2010-04-20). . The National Law Journal. US. Archived from the original on 2010-03-29.
  241. ^ a b c d e f g h Bronstad, Amanda (2010-05-17). "Judge Agrees to Expand Plaintiffs Committees in Toyota MDL". The National Law Journal. US. Retrieved 2016-09-21.
  242. ^ Zalubowski, David (2012-12-26). "Toyota settlement in sudden-acceleration case will top $1 billion". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2012-12-27.
  243. ^ Hirsch, Jerry; Bensinger, Ken (2013-10-25). "Toyota settles acceleration lawsuit after $3-million verdict". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2013-11-24.
  244. ^ a b c Vlasic, Bill; Apuzzo, Matt (2014-03-19). "Toyota Is Fined $1.2 Billion for Concealing Safety Defects". The New York Times. Retrieved 2014-03-20.
  245. ^ a b c d e "NPR Vehicle Acceleration Complaints Database". NPR. from the original on 21 January 2011. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  246. ^ Data for the chart from The Detroit Free Press, 2010-02-01, page 6A
  247. ^ . Consumer Reports Cars Blog. Consumers Union of U.S. 2009-12-07. Archived from the original on 2010-04-20. Retrieved 2010-05-22.
  248. ^ "Fact Check: Toyota not alone in acceleration problems". CNN. 2010-02-06. from the original on 2010-04-08. Retrieved 2011-02-11.
  249. ^ . Blogs.consumerreports.org. 2009-12-07. Archived from the original on 2010-04-20. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  250. ^ All Things Considered. "Unintended Acceleration Not Limited To Toyotas". NPR. from the original on 2011-01-27. Retrieved 2011-03-03.
  251. ^ . Archived from the original on 2010-02-13. Retrieved 2011-02-11.
  252. ^ "Toyota Recalls Put into Context". Edmunds. 2010-02-10. Retrieved 2016-09-21.
  253. ^ Schmitt, Bertel (5 June 2010). "NHTSA Closes Barn Door, Hides Evidence". The Truth about Cars. Retrieved 2011-02-11.

External links edit

  • Official Toyota Recall Information & Latest News.
  • .
  • Toyota Recall Lawsuits, FindLaw
  • Toyota Unintended Accelerator Investigation at The Crittenden Automotive Library (hearing transcripts, government reports including individual crash reports)
  • Finding a $Billion Dollar Fault Mode from Circuit Cellar, where Colin O'Flynn was able to induce a similar fault on a test bench

2009, 2011, toyota, vehicle, recalls, 2009, toyota, vehicle, recalls, involved, three, separate, related, recalls, automobiles, japanese, manufacturer, toyota, motor, corporation, which, occurred, 2009, start, 2010, toyota, initiated, recalls, first, with, ass. The 2009 11 Toyota vehicle recalls involved three separate but related recalls of automobiles by the Japanese manufacturer Toyota Motor Corporation which occurred at the end of 2009 and the start of 2010 Toyota initiated the recalls the first two with the assistance of the U S National Highway Traffic Safety Administration NHTSA after reports that several vehicles experienced unintended acceleration The first recall on November 2 2009 was to correct a possible incursion of an incorrect or out of place front driver s side floor mat into the foot pedal well which can cause pedal entrapment The second recall on January 21 2010 was begun after some crashes were shown not to have been caused by floor mat incursion This latter defect was identified as a possible mechanical sticking of the accelerator pedal causing unintended acceleration referred to as Sticking Accelerator Pedal by Toyota The original action was initiated by Toyota in their Defect Information Report dated October 5 2009 amended January 27 2010 1 Following the floor mat and accelerator pedal recalls Toyota also issued a separate recall for hybrid anti lock brake software in February 2010 2 Two of the vehicles under recall the Toyota Camry XV40 at top and the Toyota Corolla E140 at bottom As of January 28 2010 Toyota had announced recalls of approximately 5 2 million vehicles for the pedal entrapment floor mat problem and an additional 2 3 million vehicles for the accelerator pedal problem Approximately 1 7 million vehicles are subject to both 3 4 Certain related Lexus models and the Pontiac Vibe the latter being based on the Corolla were also affected 5 6 The next day Toyota widened the recall to include 1 8 million vehicles in Europe and 75 000 in China 7 By then the worldwide total number of cars recalled by Toyota stood at 9 million 8 Sales of multiple recalled models were suspended for several weeks as a result of the accelerator pedal recall 9 with the vehicles awaiting replacement parts As of January 2010 21 deaths were alleged due to the pedal problem since 2000 but following the January 28 recall additional NHTSA complaints brought the alleged total to 37 10 The number of alleged victims and reported problems sharply increased following the recall announcements 11 which were heavily covered by U S media 12 although the causes of individual reports were difficult to verify 13 14 15 Government officials automotive experts Toyota and members of the general public contested the scope of the sudden acceleration issue and the veracity of victim and problem reports 16 17 18 Various parties attributed sudden unintended acceleration reports to mechanical electric and driver error causes 19 20 21 Some US owners that had their recalled vehicles repaired still reported accelerator pedal issues leading to investigations and the finding of improper repairs 22 23 The recalls further led to additional NHTSA and Toyota investigations 24 25 along with multiple lawsuits 26 On February 8 2011 the NHTSA in collaboration with NASA released its findings into the investigation on the Toyota drive by wire throttle system After a 10 month search NASA and NHTSA scientists found no electronic defect in Toyota vehicles 27 Driver error or pedal misapplication was found responsible for most of the incidents 28 The report ended by stating Our conclusion is Toyota s problems were mechanical not electrical This included sticking accelerator pedals and pedals caught under floor mats 29 However on October 24 2013 a jury ruled against Toyota and found that unintended acceleration could have been caused due to deficiencies in the drive by wire throttle system or Electronic Throttle Control System ETCS Michael Barr of the Barr Group testified 30 that NASA had not been able to complete its examination of Toyota s ETCS and that Toyota did not follow best practices for real time life critical software and that a single bit flip which can be caused by cosmic rays could cause unintended acceleration As well the run time stack of the real time operating system was not large enough and that it was possible for the stack to grow large enough to overwrite data that could cause unintended acceleration 31 32 As a result Toyota has entered into settlement talks with its plaintiffs 33 Contents 1 Recall timeline 2 Floor mat recall 2 1 Affected vehicles for floor mat recall 2 2 Amended recall to include accelerator pedal 3 Accelerator pedal recall 3 1 Affected vehicles and vehicle lines 3 2 History of accelerator pedal design 3 3 Field workaround for sudden unintended acceleration 4 Anti lock brake software recall 4 1 Affected vehicles for anti lock brake software recall 5 Other recalls 6 Investigations 6 1 NHTSA investigations 6 2 MLIT investigations 6 3 US congressional hearings 6 3 1 US governors letter to congressional members 7 Aftermath 7 1 Economic impact 7 2 Manufacturer changes 7 3 Competitor reactions 7 4 Release of Toyota driver jailed for fatal crash 7 5 Media coverage and criticism 7 5 1 James Sikes alleged unintended acceleration case 7 6 Public image 8 Other possible causes of unintended acceleration 8 1 Electronic throttle control system 8 1 1 ABC News acceleration controversy 8 1 2 Possible cruise control cause 8 2 Driver error 8 2 1 Factors leading to pedal misapplication 8 2 2 Previous findings of driver error 8 2 3 NHTSA and NASA Investigation Verdict 9 Litigation 9 1 Settlement with the U S government 10 Other manufacturers 11 See also 12 References 13 External linksRecall timeline editSep 26 2007 US 55 000 Toyota Camry and ES 350 cars in all weather floor mat recall 34 Nov 02 2009 US 3 8 million Toyota and Lexus vehicles again recalled due to floor mat problem this time for all driver s side mats 5 Nov 26 2009 US floor mat recall amended to include brake override 4 and increased to 4 2 million vehicles citation needed Jan 21 2010 US 2 3 million Toyota vehicles recalled due to faulty accelerator pedals 6 of those 2 1 million already involved in floor mat recall 3 Jan 27 2010 US 1 1 million Toyotas added to amended floor mat recall 35 Jan 29 2010 Europe China 1 8 million Toyotas added to faulty accelerator pedal recall 7 Feb 08 2010 Worldwide 436 000 hybrid vehicles in brake recall following 200 reports of Prius brake glitches 2 Feb 08 2010 US 7 300 model year 2010 Camry vehicles recalled over potential brake tube problems 36 Feb 12 2010 US 8 000 MY 2010 4WD Tacoma pick up trucks recalled over concerns about possible defective front drive shafts 37 38 Apr 16 2010 US 600 000 MY 1998 2010 Toyota Sienna for possible corrosion of spare tire carrier cable 39 Apr 19 2010 World 21 000 MY 2010 Toyota Land Cruiser Prado and 13 000 Lexus GX 460 SUV s recalled to reprogram the stability control system 40 41 Apr 28 2010 US 50 000 MY 2003 Toyota Sequoia recalled to reprogram the stability control system 42 May 21 2010 Japan 4 509 US 7 000 MY 2010 LS for steering system software update 43 July 5 2010 World 270 000 Crown and Lexus models for valve springs with potential production issue 44 July 29 2010 US 412 000 Avalons and LX 470s for replacement of steering column components 45 August 28 2010 US amp Canada approximately 1 13 million Toyota Corolla and Toyota Matrix vehicles produced between 2005 and 2008 for Engine Control Modules ECM that may have been improperly manufactured 46 February 8 2011 US NASA and NHTSA inquiry reveals that there were no electronic faults in Toyota cars that would have caused acceleration issues However accelerator pedal entrapments remain a problem 47 February 22 2011 US Toyota recalls an additional 2 17 million vehicles for accelerator pedals that become trapped on floor hardware 48 Floor mat recall editOn September 26 2007 Toyota recalled 55 000 sets of heavy duty rubber floor mats from the Toyota Camry and ES 350 sedans 34 The recalled mats were of the optional all weather type NHTSA stated that the recall was due to the risk that unsecured mats could move forward and trap the accelerator pedal 34 External image nbsp Accelerator trapped by unsecured floor mat causing wide open throttle Associated Press 49 On August 28 2009 a two car collision killed four people riding in a Lexus dealer provided loaner ES 350 in San Diego California 50 51 52 53 The NHTSA released a safety investigation report on October 25 finding that the accident vehicle was wrongly fitted with all weather rubber floor mats meant for the RX 400h SUV and that these mats were not secured by either of the two retaining clips 54 The brake hardware also showed signs of heavy braking consistent with a stuck accelerator pedal 54 The report stated that the accelerator pedal s hinge did not allow for relieving obstructions and the dashboard lacked directions for the three second emergency press of the push button keyless ignition NHTSA investigators also recovered the accident vehicle s accelerator pedal which was still bonded to the SUV floor mat 54 The return spring action of the accelerator pedal was found to be smooth and unencumbered 55 Another investigation conducted by the San Diego County Sheriff s Department found that three days before the crash another customer had complained to the dealership about the floor mat trapping the same loaner car s accelerator pedal while driving 56 The prior driver had switched to neutral and tugged on the floor mat which released the accelerator 56 On November 2 2009 the NHTSA denied a petition to reopen previously closed unintended acceleration investigations of Toyota vehicles stating they had already been thoroughly investigated making it unlikely for the NHTSA to reach any new conclusions 57 Later that day Toyota issued a voluntary recall of 3 8 million vehicles with a letter sent to owners asking them to remove the driver floor mat and not replace it with any other type of mat 5 In its November 2 2009 recall announcement Toyota appeared to claim the floor mats were solely at fault stating The question of unintended acceleration involving Toyota and Lexus vehicles has been repeatedly and thoroughly investigated by NHTSA without any finding of defect other than the risk from an unsecured or incompatible driver s floor mat 5 58 but the NHTSA issued another statement stating This matter is not closed until Toyota has effectively addressed the defect the letter was inaccurate and misleading and that removal of the floor mats is simply an interim measure not a remedy of the underlying defect in the vehicles 59 60 Affected vehicles for floor mat recall edit According to Toyota USA the floor mat recall is confined to the following models 61 MY 2005 2010 Toyota Avalon MY 2007 2010 Toyota Camry MY 2009 2010 Toyota Corolla MY 2008 2010 Toyota Highlander MY 2009 2010 Toyota Matrix MY 2004 2009 Toyota Prius MY 2005 2010 Toyota Tacoma MY 2007 2010 Toyota Tundra MY 2009 2010 Toyota Venza MY 2007 2010 Lexus ES 350 MY 2006 2010 Lexus IS 250 MY 2009 2010 Pontiac VibeToyota UK states that the floor mat recall affects US models only 62 Amended recall to include accelerator pedal edit On November 25 2009 Toyota amended its floor mat recall involving the same 3 8 million vehicles sold in North America Toyota will reconfigure the accelerator pedal replace the all weather floor mats with thinner mats and install a brake override system to prevent 63 unwanted acceleration 4 The brake override system also called brake to idle and already a common design in German cars allows the driver to override the accelerator by hitting the brakes In a follow up statement the NHTSA announced the November 25 2009 recall details as a vehicle based remedy to address the floor mat pedal issue 64 According to Toyota the repair work done under the amended recall for floor mat incursion problems are as follows 4 The accelerator pedal will be shaved to reduce the risk of floor mat entrapment All weather floor mats will be removed and replaced with a newly designed mat A brake override system which cuts engine power if both the accelerator and brake are detected as pressed will be installed A replacement pedal with the same shape as the modified pedal would be made available at a later date For drivers who have existing all weather floor mats but do not need or want the newly designed all weather floor mat the existing mat will be removed and the owner reimbursed In its November 25 2009 announcement Toyota stated that dealers would be instructed first on how to reshape the accelerator pedal for the repair 4 Installation of the brake override began in January 2010 on Toyota Camry and Lexus ES 350 models the vehicles with the most units included in the recall 40 65 Accelerator pedal recall editOn January 21 2010 Toyota initiated a second recall this time in response to reports of accelerator pedals sticking in cars without floor mats 9 The company had received three such complaints in 2009 66 In its recall announcement Toyota stated that The condition is rare and does not occur suddenly It can occur when the pedal mechanism becomes worn and in certain conditions the accelerator pedal may become harder to depress slower to return or in the worst case stuck in a partially depressed position 4 A concurrent NHTSA press release identified the issue as the Sticky Pedal Recall and described the problem and remedy as follows The accelerator pedal becomes harder to depress or slower to return to the closed position The accelerator pedal may become stuck in a partially depressed position Should the pedal become stuck while driving drivers should switch to neutral and stop A repair fix would be applied by the manufacturer to prevent the sticky pedal condition A new pedal would later be made available to replace repaired pedals 67 The January 21 recall announcement for the accelerator pedal problem covered 2 3 million vehicles sold in the U S 3 4 Toyota then widened the recall to include 1 8 million vehicles in Europe and 75 000 in China 7 On January 26 Toyota announced that until they had finalized an appropriate remedy to address the potential for sticking accelerator pedals sales would be suspended for selected vehicles 9 On January 31 2010 The Wall Street Journal reported that U S regulators cleared Toyota s proposed repair for the pedals and the company would resume production by February 8 68 On February 1 2010 Toyota said that its dealers should get parts to fix the sticky accelerator pedal by the end of the week 69 Affected vehicles and vehicle lines edit According to the manufacturer Toyota s accelerator pedal recall and suspension of sales in North America is confined to the following vehicles vehicles affected are based on certain Vehicle Identification Numbers 4 70 MY 2005 2010 Toyota Avalon MY 2007 2010 Toyota Camry excludes Camry Hybrid and some other models MY 2009 2010 Toyota Corolla MY 2010 Toyota Highlander excludes Highlander Hybrid MY 2009 2010 Toyota Matrix MY 2009 2010 Toyota RAV4 MY 2008 2010 Toyota Sequoia MY 2007 2010 Toyota TundraOn January 27 2010 Toyota USA issued an expanded list of vehicles under recall including 1 MY 2008 2009 Toyota Highlander excludes Highlander Hybrid MY 2009 2010 Toyota Venza vehicles built in Japan use Denso pedals and are not subject to the recallOn January 29 2010 the Toyota recall was extended to Europe and China 71 The number of vehicles likely to be affected in Europe was unconfirmed but Toyota said it may reach up to 1 8 million 7 At the time of recall there had been 30 incidents involving the accelerator pedal problem in Europe 72 The vehicles affected in Europe are 72 Feb 2005 Aug 2009 Toyota Aygo automatic models only 73 Nov 2008 Nov 2009 Toyota iQ Nov 2005 Sep 2009 Toyota Yaris Oct 2006 Jan 2010 Toyota Auris Oct 2006 Dec 2009 Toyota Corolla Feb 2009 Jan 2010 Toyota Verso Nov 2008 Dec 2009 Toyota Avensis Nov 2005 Nov 2009 Toyota RAV4On January 30 2010 PSA Peugeot Citroen announced it was recalling cars built in a Czech Republic plant Toyota Peugeot Citroen Automobile Czech a joint venture with Toyota Although the company did not say when it would begin the recall nor how many cars were affected the plant in question which produces the Peugeot 107 Citroen C1 and the Toyota Aygo produces 200 000 cars a year 74 On February 2 2010 Toyota announced that the recalls could extend to Africa Latin America and the Middle East where Toyota said it had sold a total of 180 000 vehicles although the company did not specify how many might be affected by a recall 75 On February 3 2010 Toyota Australia announced that its accelerator pedals are made by a different supplier and that there is no need for a recall of Australian made vehicles 76 History of accelerator pedal design edit Automobile accelerator pedals have historically been mechanical assemblies that link the pedal to the engine throttle by mechanical linkages or a Bowden cable With the advent of electronic throttle control accelerator pedals consist of a spring loaded pedal arm connected to an electronic transducer This transducer typically a potentiometer or Hall effect sensor converts the position of the pedal arm to an electronic signal which is sent to an electronic control unit ECU The older mechanically designed accelerator pedals not only provided a spring return but the mechanism inherently provided some friction This friction introduced mechanical hysteresis into the pedal force versus pedal position transfer function Put more simply once the pedal was set at a specific position the friction would help keep the pedal at this setting This made it easier for the driver to maintain a pedal position For example if the driver s foot is slightly jostled by a bump in the road the accelerator pedal tends to stay at its setting While these old purely mechanical designs did have some friction the return spring force was always designed to overcome this friction with a considerable safety margin The return spring force ensured that the throttle returned to zero if the pedal force applied by the driver was reduced or removed With electronic accelerator pedals there was little inherent friction because of the simplicity of the mechanical design The tactile pedal response of only a spring force with no hysteresis can make it more difficult for a driver to maintain an accelerator pedal position Manufacturers of electronic accelerator pedals designed their pedals with additional parts to recreate the tactile response of the older mechanical accelerator pedals To quote from CTS Corporation s 2004 US patent application drivers generally prefer the feel i e the tactile response of conventional cable driven throttle systems Designers have therefore attempted to address this preference with mechanisms for emulating the tactile response of cable driven accelerator pedals 77 The Toyota electronic accelerator pedals contain a special friction device made of nylon 4 6 or polyphenylene sulfide within the pedal assembly to recreate the tactile response of older pedals According to the Toyota recall information it is this device that which in some instances has been preventing the accelerator pedal from returning to zero To quote from the Toyota recall FAQ The issue involves a friction device in the pedal designed to provide the proper feel by adding resistance and making the pedal steady and stable This friction device includes a shoe that rubs against an adjoining surface during normal pedal operation Due to the materials used wear and environmental conditions these surfaces may over time begin to stick and release instead of operating smoothly In some cases friction could increase to a point that the pedal is slow to return to the idle position or in rare cases the pedal sticks leaving the throttle partially open 78 According to Toyota the tactile response friction device in the affected Toyota electronic accelerator pedals sometimes creates too much friction This excess friction either slows the pedal return or completely stops it In the worst case once a pedal is pushed to a specific setting it stays at the setting even if the driver removes their foot from the pedal Early reports in March 2007 involved the Tundra pickup truck which used nylon 4 6 in the friction lever 79 Some questions and confusion exist if the Toyota explanation fully accounts for all instances of unintended acceleration involving Toyota vehicles CTS Corporation 80 the American manufacturer of the electronic accelerator pedals that Toyota claims are at fault has announced that The problem of sudden unintended acceleration has been reported to have existed in some Lexus vehicles and Toyota vehicles going back to 1999 when CTS did not even make this product for any customer CTS believes that the rare slow return pedal phenomenon which may occur in extreme environmental conditions should absolutely not be linked with any sudden unintended acceleration incidents CTS is also not aware of any accidents and injuries caused by the rare slow return pedal condition to the best of its knowledge CTS wishes to clarify that it does not and has never made any accelerator pedals for Lexus vehicles and that CTS also has no accelerator pedals in Toyota vehicles prior to model year 2005 81 In June 2010 Chrysler also recalled 35 000 Dodge and Jeep models for sticky accelerator pedals made by CTS Corporation Chrysler stated that the CTS pedals have pivot bushings that may dislodge causing the accelerator to become stuck or slow to return to idle 82 Field workaround for sudden unintended acceleration edit Different workarounds user actions that ameliorate or prevent a negative previously unforeseen circumstance have been suggested as temporary fixes Putting the car s transmission in neutral during out of control acceleration disengages the gears 83 Turning the ignition to the ACC accessory position which while cutting power to the engine will also disable the power steering and the brake assist Turning the ignition key to the OFF position which will also cut power but may cause lockage of the steering wheels and will also disable the power steering and the brake assist 84 On whether braking alone may fail to stop affected vehicles a driver account in the Los Angeles Times claimed that the attempt to stop a 2005 Camry was unsuccessful with both the brake and emergency brake 85 However tests of the Camry by Car and Driver in 2009 attempting to use the brakes to stop acceleration of a purposely stuck throttle at 70 100 and 120 miles per hour 110 160 and 190 km h found that the test driver was able to reduce speed to 10 mph 16 km h in all instances and in the 70 and 100 mph 110 and 160 km h tests stop the car completely 86 87 The Camry s braking distances with a purposely stuck accelerator were also shorter than that of the Ford Taurus regular stopping distance 86 Car and Driver concluded that based on their emergency stopping tests the Camry s brakes could overcome the accelerator in all cases even without a brake override and that stopping distances with a wide open throttle were largely indiscernible from regular braking 86 In 2010 Edmunds com also tested the stopping distances of a Toyota Camry SE V6 with a purposely stuck wide open throttle Their tests found that the car s brakes could override a stuck accelerator and bring the car to a stop Although the transmission downshifted and the engine continued to propel the car the stopping distance compared favorably to a normal panic stop on wet asphalt 88 Edmunds com did note that switching to neutral was the best option given that average drivers may not press the brakes as firmly and lighter presses will simply wear the brakes down 88 The German Commission on Technical Compliance TUV of Rheinland also tested the stopping distance of Toyota iQ Aygo Yaris Auris Verso Avensis and RAV4 models 89 With the accelerator purposely jammed to 80 of maximum speed each vehicle was able to brake safely to a halt 89 The TUV findings indicated that each model met the legal requirements for deceleration and stopping distances and that all Toyota models tested had brakes that could override a stuck accelerator 89 Anti lock brake software recall editOn February 3 2010 the NHTSA announced that it had received reports from 102 drivers of possible problems related to the braking system on the 2010 model year Toyota Prius 90 while an additional 14 such reports had been received in Japan Three of these reports claimed that brake problems had led to the car crashing with one accident in July 2009 occurring when a Prius crashed head on into another car injuring two people 91 The Prius was not involved in Toyota s second recall although it had been involved in the first recall involving floor mats Toyota said that it was investigating the reports and that it would be premature to comment 92 On February 3 2010 the Japanese Transport Ministry began investigating the redesigned Prius 93 and Toyota said that it was aware of 77 Prius brake complaints in Japan 94 On February 4 2010 the NHTSA announced it had opened an investigation into the issues with the Prius s brakes 95 which Toyota said was caused by a software glitch The company said it was looking into the best way to solve the problem 96 An internal NHTSA memo indicated that the issue was the short delay in regenerative braking when hitting a bump resulting in increased stopping distance 97 On February 6 2010 Toyota said that it had fixed the braking problem on Prius models built since late January 2010 via a software update for the ABS to improve brake response 2 On the same day a Japanese newspaper reported that Toyota had contacted dealers in Japan about their intent to recall all affected vehicles While it was unclear if the same step would be taken elsewhere American dealers had been told that Toyota was planning on repairing the vehicles 98 On February 8 Toyota announced a voluntary global recall of 2010 model year Prius models produced through late January 2010 2 99 The affected vehicles will receive a software update for the brakes and its ABS system 2 In total Toyota recalled three hybrid vehicles to reprogram the anti lock braking ABS software 40 In February 2010 a US federal grand jury in New York began the process of determining if there is probable cause to charge Toyota criminally for the way it has handled the Prius brake recall 100 and a civil class action lawsuit has been filed on behalf of 2010 Prius hybrid owners 101 A total of 133 000 Prius vehicles in the U S and 52 000 in Europe are to receive the same software update 2 Guardian co uk reports that this affects the third generation Prius built before January 27 2010 Affected vehicles for anti lock brake software recall edit Toyota Sai Toyota Prius 2010 model year Lexus HS 250h 2010 model year Other recalls editOn February 8 2009 Toyota announced a recall of approximately 7 300 early 2010 model year 4 cylinder Camrys due to the possibility of the power steering hose rubbing into the front brake line which may cause a brake fluid leak 102 On February 3 2010 Toyota recalled approximately 153 000 vehicles from model years 2005 to 2011 for failing to comply with requirements of FMVSS 110 Tire Selection and Rims due to missing load carrying capacity labels On February 12 2010 Toyota recalled approximately 8 000 2010 model year 4WD Tacoma trucks for potential front drive shaft issues The recall involves inspecting a drive shaft component which if cracked will be replaced 103 The Tacoma pickups were built between mid December 2009 and early February 2010 Most affected vehicles have not been sold 104 Another recall for frame corrosion recall was confined to the following model s 105 MY 2000 2003 Toyota Tundra According to Toyota USA frame corrosion could allow spare tires or the fuel tank to fall off the vehicle On July 7 2010 Toyota recalled 270 000 Lexus and Crown vehicles worldwide for improperly manufactured valve springs According to Toyota the condition can cause rough idling and potential engine stalling On October 21 2010 Toyota announced a recall of 1 53 million vehicles 740 000 in the U S 599 000 in Japan and 191 000 in Europe and other markets worldwide the recall affected MY 2005 and 2006 Avalon MY 2004 to 2006 Highlander non hybrid and Lexus RX330 and MY 2006 Lexus GS300 IS250 and IS350 the models affected in Japan and elsewhere except the U S include MY 2002 to 2006 Toyota Crown Crown Majesta Harrier Mark X Alphard Kluger and Lexus GS350 IS250 and IS350 The recall concerns brake fluid leakage from the master cylinder U S market and non U S marketed Toyota Crown and Lexus GS350 and an electrical problem with the fuel pump which would cause engine stalling all markets except the U S On November 9 2011 Toyota announced a recall of 550 000 vehicles 447 000 in the U S 38 000 in Japan and 25 000 in Australia and New Zealand worldwide the recall affected MY 2004 2005 Camry Highlander Sienna and Solara MY 2004 Avalon MY 2006 Highlander HV MY 2004 2005 Lexus ES330 and RX330 and MY 2006 RX400h The recall concerns a steering problem caused by the misalignment of the inner and outer rings of the crankshaft pulley which could cause noise or the Check Engine light to illuminate if this problem is not corrected the power steering belt can fall off the pulley which can cause a sudden loss of power assist On October 10 2012 Toyota announced a recall of 7 43 million vehicles 2 47 million in the US 460 000 in Japan 1 39 million in Europe and 3 11 million in other markets worldwide In the US the recall affects MY 2005 2010 Yaris Corolla Matrix Camry RAV4 Highlander Tundra and Sequoia as well as Scion xB and xD In Japan the recall affects MY 2005 2010 Vitz Belta Ractis Ist and Corolla Rumion In Europe the recall affects MY 2005 2010 Yaris Corolla Auris Camry and RAV 4 Vehicles in overseas markets are also affected The recall concerns a problem with the driver s side power window switch that sticks and could lead it to melt or catch fire 106 It is not something that would cause any deadly accidents like the recall of 2009 and repairs include the application of a special fluorine grease to the switch 106 On January 30 2013 Toyota announced a recall of one million vehicles in the US The recall affects 752 000 MY 2003 2004 Corolla and Corolla Matrix models The recall concerns the airbag module which can cause the airbag to inflate improperly Toyota also announced a recall affecting 270 000 MY 2006 2012 Lexus IS models This recall concerns loose nuts on the wiper blades which can cause the wipers to fail especially if there is a heavy buildup of snow On March 15 2013 Toyota announced a recall of 209 000 vehicles in the US The recall affects MY 2007 2013 FJ Cruiser models The recall concerns the driver and front passenger seat belt retractors which can come loose especially if the rear doors are slammed repeatedly Investigations editNumerous investigations have taken place including those by the U S NHTSA and the Japanese transport ministry 107 The difficulty of investigations is compounded by the fact that driver error can be a possibility in certain cases The Wall Street Journal reported Even when dealers and automakers suspect driver error it is difficult for them to outright blame their customers for fear of alienating them or appearing insensitive 20 which USA Today also suggested 108 Questions about why cases are mainly in the U S have also been raised by international investigations German publication Der Spiegel reported that similar accidents have rarely occurred outside North America and although there have been some reports of stuck Toyota accelerator pedals in Germany all drivers braked successfully without loss of life 109 In another U S incident on December 26 2009 four people died in Southlake Texas a suburb of Dallas when their 2008 Toyota Avalon sped off the road and through a fence landing upside down in a pond The car s floor mats were found in the trunk of the car where owners had been advised to put them as part of the recall 110 According to the police report the driver suffered from epilepsy but investigators could not rule out either a vehicle defect or the possibility that the driver had suffered a seizure 15 111 On Feb 17 2010 US safety regulators launched an investigation into Corolla steering complaints 112 113 Following the widespread media publicity of the recalls several media publications suggested that investigations of subsequent reports would have considered the possibility of copycat complaints and hoaxes with potential complainants seeking to capitalize on possible settlement money 114 or affected by the psychological bandwagon effect of the mass publicity 115 On March 14 2010 the Norwegian government considered whether to ban Prius cars from roads in Norway pending an investigation after a near fatal incident involving a senior citizen 116 On March 29 after receipt of technical and other information police indicted the driver involved in the Prius incident for making a false emergency call to police 117 The use of vehicle event data recorders and video surveillance also proved beneficial to investigators with findings of driver error in a March 9 2010 Prius alleged sudden acceleration crash where a 56 year old housekeeper claimed to have braked but was recorded pressing the wrong pedal 118 and also in a March 29 2010 Camry alleged sudden acceleration crash where a 76 year old driver claimed to have braked but was filmed not doing so until after impact 119 NHTSA investigations edit NHTSA data shows that there was an annual average of 26 abrupt acceleration reports in the 1999 2001 Toyota Camry and Lexus ES models This number increased by more than 400 to a total of 132 annually in 2002 2004 models which were designed with new electronic throttles 120 Toyota responded by stating Six times in the past six years NHTSA has undertaken an exhaustive review of allegations of unintended acceleration on Toyota and Lexus vehicles and six times the agency closed the investigation without finding any electronic engine control system malfunction to be the cause of unintended acceleration 121 In 2004 the NHTSA launched a probe of throttle control systems on around 1 million Lexus and Toyota sedans 122 Upon that probe Toyota urged the NHTSA to define the issues as quick bursts where the engine surged to something less than a wide open throttle The company compared the complaints to previous sudden unintended acceleration cases the NHTSA deemed driver error 122 It also said the computer could not open the throttle without the accelerator pedal pressed and the brakes would be able to stop the car anyway 122 After several months of investigating the NHTSA said it found no evidence of a defect and no data was indicating any bad parts 122 Christopher Santucci an employee of Toyota s Washington D C office and an NHTSA employee until he was hired by Toyota in 2003 testified that he was informed by the NHTSA in March 2004 about the pending investigation over unintended acceleration complaints According to Santucci in his deposition his former NHTSA colleagues decided not to investigate some incidents involving acceleration lasting longer than 1 second The decision to exclude certain incidents from the investigation reduced the significance of the issue to the NHTSA at least on paper 122 123 124 However in 2005 2006 and 2008 Toyota customers again asked the NHTSA to investigate uncontrolled acceleration from electronic throttle controls and power steering issues Although there were hundreds of complaints the NHTSA found no evidence of defects and in every case Toyota provided data it said showed no such evidence On November 2 2009 the NHTSA denied a petition to reopen previously closed unintended investigations of Toyota vehicles stating they were unlikely to reach any new conclusions 125 In February 2010 however NHTSA was again looking into the electronic throttle control systems on Toyota vehicles 24 In February 2010 State Farm insurance revealed that it had warned NHTSA in late 2007 on an increased trend of Toyota accidents related to the recalled models other insurers stated however that they had not seen such a trend 126 On June 1 2010 the NHTSA opened an investigation into reports that floor mats were jamming accelerators in Ford Fusion and Mercury Milan sedans 127 On June 30 2010 NHTSA reported on its latest broad study of unintended acceleration on all car makes including Toyota in conjunction with NASA and the National Academy of Sciences NHTSA stated that it was unable to find electronic throttle defects but identified floor mat entrapment and pedals that were slow to return to idle as two causes of Toyota complaints NHTSA also stated it could only verify one Toyota unintended acceleration accident caused by a vehicle defect 128 On July 14 2010 The Wall Street Journal reported that NHTSA investigations of 75 accidents alleged to sudden acceleration in Toyota vehicles had found driver error as the primary cause in all but one case attributed to floor mats 129 130 Black box recorder data found that during these crashes the throttle was open and brakes not pressed 130 On July 30 The Wall Street Journal quoted the former head of NHTSA s Recall Management Division stating that the investigation has become very political with Department of Transportation officials hoping against hope that they find something that points back to a flaw 131 Although the NHTSA study finding driver error was reportedly complete DOT officials had blocked its release 131 On February 8 2011 NASA and the NHTSA announced the findings of a ten month study concerning the causes of the Toyota malfunctions of 2009 132 According to their findings there were no electronic faults in the cars that could have caused the sudden acceleration problems 47 133 134 135 The jury is back the verdict is in There is no electronic based cause for unintended high speed acceleration in Toyotas period Transportation Department Secretary Ray LaHood declared in the LA Times 47 MLIT investigations edit Hiroko Tabuchi writing in The New York Times claims that problematic vehicles may have been accurately reported in Japan due to police correctly blaming driver error as no verified unintended acceleration case exists citation needed The Japanese Ministry of Land Infrastructure Transport and Tourism MLIT released its findings of sudden acceleration complaints in February 2010 finding that of the 134 cases logged by the ministry between 2007 and 2009 Toyota accounted for 38 cases 28 3 of all reported 136 Because Toyota s market share was approximately 27 8 of all passenger cargo vehicles the MLIT noted that no particularly unusual rate was found among these complaints 136 US congressional hearings edit The House Oversight and Government Reform Committee and the House Energy and Commerce Committee held hearings in February 2010 20 137 Retired social worker Rhonda Smith testified before Congress that her car accelerated out of control but the NHTSA investigator determined that a misplaced floor mat had caused the problem 20 the subsequent owner of the car reported no trouble after driving the car over 27 000 miles 20 In a February 2010 letter to Toyota US congressional investigators said a review of consumer complaints produced by Toyota shows that company personnel identified sticking pedals or floor mats as the cause of only 16 percent of the unintended acceleration reports 138 Several media reports later claimed that Toyota had announced that the recalls will not completely solve the accelerator pedal problems On February 24 2010 Toyota responded that it has rigorously tested its solutions and is confident with the recall repairs but that it would continue to monitor other possible contributing factors for unintended acceleration including mechanical electronics and driver error 139 Akio Toyoda the president and CEO of Toyota issued the following statement in regards to the recalled vehicles 140 Toyota has for the past few years been expanding its business rapidly Quite frankly I fear the pace at which we have grown may have been too quick I would like to point out here that Toyota s priority has traditionally been the following First Safety Second Quality and Third Volume These priorities became confused and we were not able to stop think and make improvements as much as we were able to before and our basic stance to listen to customers voices to make better products has weakened somewhat We pursued growth over the speed at which we were able to develop our people and our organization and we should sincerely be mindful of that I regret that this has resulted in the safety issues described in the recalls we face today and I am deeply sorry for any accidents that Toyota drivers have experienced Especially I would like to extend my condolences to the members of the Saylor family for the accident in San Diego I would like to send my prayers again and I will do everything in my power to ensure that such a tragedy never happens again In early 2010 the US government began considering requiring all vehicles sold in the US to have accelerator override built into their brake systems 141 Research groups have questioned whether Toyota would get off easily because of its large investment in lobbying in Washington with close ties to the congressional representatives who will lead inquiries into the company s string of safety problems 142 Other publications noted that half the Democratic congressional members involved in the hearings had received campaign contributions from the United Auto Workers union a major stockholder of Toyota s top U S rival General Motors 143 US governors letter to congressional members edit On February 10 2010 four bipartisan US governors from the states of Kentucky Indiana Mississippi and Alabama where Toyota operates plants wrote a letter to Congress commenting about the federal government s obvious conflict of interest because of its huge financial stake in some of its competitors referring to Toyota as a victim of the media s aggressive and questionable news coverage The letter also noted there were 16 4 million recalls in the auto industry for 2009 many as serious or more serious than Toyota s recall 144 145 Aftermath editToyota stopped producing vehicles on certain production lines for the week of February 1 2010 to assess and coordinate activities The North America vehicle production facilities affected were located in Cambridge and Woodstock Ontario Canada where Corolla Matrix and RAV4 models are produced Princeton Indiana Highlander and Sequoia Georgetown Kentucky Avalon and Camry and San Antonio Texas Tundra 146 In addition to recalling vehicles Toyota announced that it would install brake override systems on all Lexus Scion and Toyota vehicles by the end of 2010 65 On February 3 2010 United States Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood advised owners of vehicles affected by the recall to stop driving their vehicles until they can be fixed by a dealer LaHood later retracted his statement stating it was obviously a misstatement 147 Secretary La Hood was criticized for making that statement by some media columnists who suspected La Hood of having a conflict of interest due to the U S government s auto bailout partial ownership of Toyota s domestic rivals General Motors and Chrysler 16 148 149 Economic impact edit The recall came at a difficult time for Toyota as it was struggling to emerge from the recession and had already suffered from a resultant decrease in sales 150 and the low exchange rate from yen to US dollars 151 On the day the recall was announced in the US it was also announced that 750 jobs would be cut at Toyota s British plant at Burnaston near Derby 150 Also it was estimated that each Toyota dealership in the US could lose between US 1 75 million to US 2 million a month in revenue a total loss of US 2 470 million across the country from the entire incident 8 Additionally Toyota Motors as a whole announced that it could face losses totaling as much as US 2 000 million from lost output and sales worldwide 75 Between 25 January and 29 January 2010 Toyota shares fell in value by 15 152 According to analysts Toyota owners including owners of cars not recalled may also be economically affected by the recall as the damage to Toyota s reputation could negatively affect the resale value of used cars 153 154 Manufacturer changes edit In addition to its recall efforts a new global quality committee to coordinate defect analysis and future recall announcements was announced by Toyota in early 2010 along with a Swift Market Analysis Response Team SMART in the U S to conduct on site vehicle inspections expanded Event Data Recorder usage and readers third party quality consultation and increased driver safety education initiatives 118 155 Industry analysts noted that the recall response was a challenge for The Toyota Way manufacturing philosophy because the recalled parts were not due to factory errors or quality control problems but rather to design issues leading to consumer complaints 156 As a result better communication of consumer issues with management was needed 156 and so the global quality committee aimed to be more responsive to consumer concerns 155 Competitor reactions edit One day after Toyota s announced sales suspension General Motors began offering a US 1 000 cash rebate targeted toward Toyota owners 157 By February 1 2010 Ford Chrysler and Hyundai were offering similar incentives 158 Release of Toyota driver jailed for fatal crash edit In February 2010 a motion for retrial was submitted on behalf of a Minnesota man Koua Fong Lee who in 2008 was sentenced to eight years in jail for rear ending a car killing three of the five occupants and injuring the other two This happened in June 2006 when he was driving home from church with his family and exiting the highway Koua insists that his 1996 Toyota Camry sped up to between 70 and 90 mph 110 and 140 km h despite heavy braking In May 2010 a vehicle inspector hired by attorneys for the convicted man reported finding problems with the car s accelerator system 159 160 161 At least two of the jurors from the 2008 trial questioned the guilty verdict 162 and one of the injured survivors filed suit against Toyota and the local dealership that sold the car stating that he believed Lee should be set free 163 164 In June 2010 the Ramsey County Attorney and prosecutor Susan Gaertner opposed a new trial stating that she saw no evidence that Koua s Camry experienced sudden unintended acceleration and a US District Court Judge was given until September 2010 to decide whether or not Lee should be re tried 165 In August 2010 the judge ruled that Lee would be re tried but the prosecutor declined to prosecute Before the ruling Gaertner offered Lee release with the condition that he would still have a felony conviction on his record barring him from driving privileges for ten years and that he would be jailed if arrested for anything else Lee did not agree to such conditions 166 Later that month a Minnesota judge freed Lee from prison and Gaertner said she would immediately drop the charges 167 Media coverage and criticism edit According to news analysis by the Project for Excellence in Journalism which analyzed weekly output from newspapers The New York Times The Washington Post USA Today and others as well as network television ABC CBS NBC and others the Toyota recalls were the 5 most reported story on U S news for the week of January 25 31 2010 at 4 of all coverage 12 The following week of February 1 7 2010 the story reached 2 at 11 of all news coverage 168 On February 10 Toyota dealers in the five state Southeast region pulled all advertising from ABC stations in protest of excessive reporting on the Toyota recalls 169 On March 5 the Associated Press described relentless media coverage of the recalls from news outlets 115 During the height of the recall crisis Toyota came in for extensive criticism Editorials criticizing alleged disproportionate coverage of the recalls ran in Automotive News 170 AutoWeek 171 BusinessWeek 172 Car and Driver 17 Motor Trend 18 Popular Mechanics 173 and the National Post 148 174 Such editorials commonly faulted media outlets for leaving out alternative explanations such as driver inattentiveness driver skills DUI being on the cellphone erroneous perceptions reckless driving or texting as causes of accidents 18 171 175 In one cited example the Los Angeles Times did not mention that an alleged Toyota runaway driver was indicted for vehicular manslaughter and driving under the influence of marijuana 176 Odds from Car and Driver indicated that the alleged fatality risk was about 1 in 200 000 recalled Toyota vehicles versus a 1 in 8 000 risk of a fatal car accident in any car in the U S 17 while Consumer Reports stated a 1 in 10 000 chance of an unintended acceleration complaint out of 20 million Toyotas on the road 16 James Sikes alleged unintended acceleration case edit On March 8 2010 a 2008 Prius allegedly uncontrollably accelerated to 94 miles per hour on a California Highway US and the Prius had to be stopped with the verbal assistance of the California Highway Patrol as news cameras watched 177 The incident received national news coverage with initial reporting including inaccurate information about the event such as the claim that a CHP car was used to physically block Sikes vehicle 178 179 Subsequent investigations uncovered suspicious information about the alleged runaway Prius driver 61 year old James Sikes including being US 19 000 behind in his Prius car payments and with US 700 000 in accumulated debt 180 181 Sikes stated he wanted a new car as compensation for the incident 180 182 Analyses by Edmunds com and Forbes found Sikes acceleration claims and fears of shifting to neutral implausible with Edmunds concluding that in other words this is BS 183 and Michael Fumento in Forbes analyzing Sikes s claims related to the mechanics of his Prius and his contradictions such as saying he didn t want to take his hands off the steering wheel to shift into neutral even though he held a cell phone in his hand almost the entire time comparing it to the balloon boy hoax 181 Further government investigator tests on Sikes s Prius reportedly showed that the brake wear were consistent with intermittent braking not constant hard braking as he claimed 184 Sikes also reportedly had a history of false police reports suspect insurance claims theft and fraud allegations and television aspirations 180 These findings raised questions about the credibility of Mr Sikes reporting of events in a Congressional memo 185 Public image edit According to a Rasmussen poll released on February 8 2010 Toyota was viewed favorably by 59 and unfavorably by 29 The poll also found 72 of Americans have followed the recent Toyota news stories somewhat closely and 31 very closely 186 A second Rasmussen poll released on February 12 found 23 of Americans believe the federal government is criticizing Toyota to aid General Motors of which it is the majority owner 38 disagreed and 39 were unsure 187 Other possible causes of unintended acceleration editElectronic throttle control system edit On November 25 2009 ABC News quoted Sean Kane head of the for profit firm Safety Research amp Strategies 188 stating that he had uncovered hundreds of non floor mat sudden acceleration cases which the floor mat recall did not address 189 Kane who works with attorneys suing Toyota 190 said his firm had discovered over 2 000 Toyota sudden acceleration cases involving 16 deaths and 243 injuries 189 publishing its most comprehensive report on the issue on Feb 5th 2010 191 Kane alleged that the problem was not with the accelerator pedals but with the electronic throttle control systems ETC 192 An electronic throttle control system is a drive by wire system in which the accelerator pedal and the engine are indirectly linked electronically instead of directly linked mechanically 193 This means that input from the accelerator pedal is just one input used to decide how wide the throttle is opened On Feb 13 2010 The Wall Street Journal reported that Kane s company was controversial because its income comes from lawsuits against auto manufacturers 188 which was not disclosed in media reports 194 auto journalists noted that the firm had a vested interest in blaming manufacturer defects while avoiding operator error 194 195 The Los Angeles Times reported that since Toyota and Lexus began installing electronic throttle control systems in 2001 complaints of unintended acceleration with vehicles from both those brands rose sharply 192 Electromagnetic interference with the electronic throttle control system is another possible cause of unintended acceleration 196 Some speculated that cosmic rays or radiation from outer space was a possible source for alleged electronic malfunctions 197 The Wall Street Journal obtained a copy of a preliminary study dated on February 4 2010 by the California based engineering research firm Exponent 198 The initial study commissioned by Toyota beginning in December 2009 concluded Exponent has so far been unable to induce through electrical disturbances to the system either unintended acceleration or behavior that might be a precursor to such an event despite concerted efforts toward this goal For the study Exponent purchased six Toyota and Lexus vehicles which were analyzed by engineers and technicians specializing in mechanical electrical and automotive engineering According to Exponent Toyota didn t limit the scope or budget of its investigation which is being shared with Toyota and lawmakers The study will continue for several more months 199 According to the Los Angeles Times Exponent s research has been criticized as being relied upon by companies in need of public defense 200 although the firm has defended its impartiality towards clients ranging from firms to the U S government 200 201 A University of California cardiologist was quoted saying I would have picked a firm with more of a reputation of neutrality citing as an example their determination that secondhand smoke isn t carcinogenic 200 201 Toyota subsequently asked Stanford University s Center for Automotive Research a facility partly funded by multiple automakers including Toyota to also evaluate the electronics claims 25 The center s J Christian Gerdes professor of mechanical engineering rejected several electronics claims as implausible and said that his findings were independent and that he received no compensation from Toyota for his evaluation 201 202 On Feb 8 2010 the NHTSA and NASA concluded the electronics were not to blame after reviewing the electronics and electromagnetic interference The finding was based on studying over 280 000 lines of software coding on nine vehicles involved in earlier sudden acceleration incidents 203 And studying the throttle systems at NASA s Langley Research Center and Chrysler s Auburn Hills headquarters 29 In January 2021 engineer Colin O Flynn was able to induce unintended acceleration with components from a Toyota vehicle using electromagnetic fault injection EMFI on a test bench He used an ECU and components from a wrecked 2005 Toyota Corolla O Flynn s experiments were conducted without access to the ECU source code and without access to the confidential report by the Barr Group 204 ABC News acceleration controversy edit On February 22 2010 ABC News broadcast a report 205 which demonstrated how unintended acceleration could be caused by inducing a short circuit in the throttle control In the segment David W Gilbert a professor of automotive technology at Southern Illinois University Carbondale was shown in a late model Avalon with ABC News reporter Brian Ross By inducing a short in an unspecified circuit Gilbert was able to cause the Avalon to accelerate dramatically After the car was stopped a diagnostic tool connected to the car s ECU displayed no fault code According to Dr Gilbert the proper design of the ETC should not have permitted a short like the one he induced to open the throttle the ECU should have detected a fault and cut the throttle Tests on GM vehicles Gilbert said did not expose a similar flaw Autoblog s analysis queried the test s real world accuracy noting that the short circuit method was not disclosed outside of wiring normally independent sensors together the ECU could not be expected to detect unrealistic scenarios and questioning ABC News and Brian Ross s objectivity 206 Autoblog also uncovered that Gilbert was being paid by parties in lawsuits against Toyota 206 Automotive analyst John McElroy on Autoline Detroit pointed to network news history of rigged car demonstrations including the 60 Minutes acceleration demo and the Dateline NBC exploding truck scandal 207 and noted that ABC News report did not include opposing views or disclose interviewee s financial ties 207 Toyota responded by inviting ABC News to be present at its evaluation of the test 207 On March 8 2010 Toyota held a live news conference where its engineers demonstrated the same short circuit method on Ford Chevrolet Chrysler and BMW vehicles 25 In each case engineers were able to induce the same dramatic acceleration with no ECU fault code 25 Stanford s Center for Automotive Research stated that ABC News demo was unrealistic and misleading 201 A study by Exponent Inc finding that the short circuit would be highly unlikely to occur naturally and could only be contrived in the laboratory was also issued 202 Toyota further demonstrated how Gilbert had allegedly shaved away wiring insulation cut wires in the ETC re spliced them in a particular sequence and added a control switch 201 208 Gilbert s financial motive being paid by Sean Kane was also questioned 208 AutoWeek 209 Edmunds com 25 and other automotive sources saw the conference as debunking ABC News claims 208 On March 11 2010 ABC News further admitted to faking 210 part of its report after tachometer screenshots were posted online 211 The freeze frames showed the parking brake open door and seat belt warning lights on while the car was allegedly accelerating to 6 000 RPM indicating that the car was actually not moving 211 Media blog Gawker com posted the photos and stated the tachometer footage is faked 211 ABC News claimed that it was impossible to get a good picture of the tachometer during the actual test 212 and re edited the footage Gawker com responded that the edited video was even more staged 213 The Associated Press added that the falsified footage created ethical questions 212 Possible cruise control cause edit In February 2010 multiple media reports claimed that Apple Inc co founder Steve Wozniak had suggested that faulty software may be part of the problem 214 215 However in a subsequent CNN interview Wozniak stated I haven t really said those things They have put those words in my mouth 216 Instead Wozniak said his comments were about a minor cruise control issue on one of his several Priuses and regarding other recalls whether it was mats whether it was a sticky accelerator pedal whatever I believe they found the right solution If Toyota says it s not electrical then I m sure they re right 216 When asked to describe his cruise control problem Wozniak said It s a little more of a procedure of upping the speed upping the speed and then suddenly it just sort of went like it thought you told it to go to infinity 216 As for alternative explanations Wozniak said If you re panicked and your car takes off you don t think of these things 216 He also clarified that his comments were to a group of teachers for a discovery museum and talking about an issue of customer support how hard it is sometimes to get to the people that can really deal with your problems 216 Automotive journalist John Voelcker s analysis of Wozniak s description blamed the issue on user error and not being familiar with the design differences of the adaptive cruise control system 217 In the Prius unlike some other cars holding down the accelerate button increases speed in 5 mph increments continuously 217 Voelcker suggested Wozniak was holding down the button for longer than necessary setting the cruise to a high set speed thus resulting in the smooth 216 acceleration to high speed he experienced 217 Some Prius users have also suggested erroneous user input explanations 218 Others have come forward with their own stories about erratic vehicle behavior while using their cruise control 219 In March 2010 Ward s Auto reported that user unfamiliarity with the faster response of laser and radar based cruise control systems was a likely factor according to AAA NHTSA and manufacturer findings 220 Driver error edit The Wall Street Journal reported on February 25 2010 that safety regulators human error experts and auto makers say driver error is the primary cause of sudden acceleration 20 Regarding the 2009 10 Toyota recalls Ward s Auto noted that NHTSA investigations over past years have found that the majority of sudden unintended acceleration cases are due to driver error 14 In such cases accidents are the result of drivers mistakenly stepping on the accelerator pedal instead of the brake 14 On November 29 2009 the Los Angeles Times quoted a motor skills consultant stating that the fault in sudden acceleration cases almost always lies with drivers who step on the wrong pedal 120 In February 2010 Car and Driver suggested that the alleged accident rate of 1 in 200 000 recalled Toyotas was highly unlikely to result from vehicle defects pointing to an increased danger for drivers who aren t smart or calm enough to shift to neutral 17 The same month Forbes referred to auto industry experts as skeptical of defect explanations suggesting that driver error and panic account for many reported problems with recalled Toyotas 221 On February 4 Leonard Evans author of Traffic Safety claimed that driver behavior was the main factor in Toyota accidents and that the consensus of 70 years of scientific research is that driver error is the prominent explanation for automotive fatalities 222 In March 2010 Forbes Michael Fumento 223 The Atlantic s Megan McArdle and attorney Ted Frank argued that the fact that most of the incidents of sudden acceleration in Toyota occur in elderly drivers strongly suggest that there is not an electronics problem as opposed to one of pedal misapplication 224 Fumento s article was titled Why Do Toyotas Hate the Elderly and McArdle noted that immigrants were also twice as likely to be involved 225 However lawsuits filed regarding sudden unintended acceleration cases along with related third party investigation reports have typically avoided the driver error explanation 195 In August 2010 The Wall Street Journal reported that experts at the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration had examined the black boxes of 58 vehicles involved in sudden acceleration reports The study found that in 35 of the cases the brakes weren t applied at the time of the crash In nine other cases in the same study the brakes were used only at the last moment before impact 226 Factors leading to pedal misapplication edit On March 10 2010 The New York Times ran an opinion piece by Richard Schmidt professor emeritus of psychology at University of California Los Angeles and sudden acceleration researcher suspecting driver error as the primary cause of unexplained Toyota sudden acceleration reports 227 Schmidt pointed to several factors that make driver error more likely elderly driver age lack of experience with the car and short stature 227 In addition unexplained sudden acceleration events were most frequently reported as occurring at low speed or fully stopped 227 Typically the driver intended to press the brake and did not consciously confuse the pedals however because of advanced age and neuromuscular irregularities short stature and difficulty reaching the pedals a slight misalignment in seating position or unfamiliarity with the car model the driver s foot contacted the accelerator by mistake 227 The resulting unexpected sudden acceleration would lead to panic with the driver thinking that the acceleration system had failed 227 The immediate response would be to brake hard but not knowing that their foot was on the accelerator pressing down caused greater acceleration 227 In such panic situations the driver would think that the brakes were not responding and continue pressing on the accelerator pedal until they crashed 227 Switching to neutral or turning off the ignition was typically not contemplated 227 Incidents occurred exclusively in automatic transmission equipped cars 227 with driver complaints involving rental cars being far more frequent All factors point to reduced driver familiarity and sophistication On March 12 2010 Autoline Detroit argued that searches for additional vehicle defects were likely fruitless as driver error was the primary cause of the 0 009 per million rate of Toyota sudden acceleration incidents from 1999 to 2009 228 with demographics and psychographics namely elderly drivers and pedal misapplication as factors 228 Also noted was that drivers with Type II diabetes adult onset which is more common among the elderly are subject to reduced sensation in their lower extremities peripheral neuropathy with related impairment in positional knowledge of foot placement proprioception 228 Wired wrote that since investigators have been unable to find evidence supporting drivers claims their Toyotas suddenly raced out of control 229 operator error is the most likely explanation 229 However victims and relatives of sudden acceleration cases are commonly unwilling to suspect involved loved ones and blame the vehicle instead 225 Analysis of alleged Toyota acceleration reports in The Atlantic and other sources have found the highest distribution of involved drivers between 70 and 80 years old with the average age skewing over 55 225 230 with elderly susceptibility to neuronal misfiring and pedal misapplication as a possible cause 225 While many alleged cases lack exact details over half of the reported incidents occurred from a complete stop or low speed providing a window for the pedal misapplication to occur 225 A prior GM study found that 60 and 70 year olds were six times more likely to experience sudden acceleration than 20 to 30 year olds 227 In The New York Times Richard Schmidt concluded that a brake override system could prevent acceleration cases where a vehicle defect existed but would not prevent sudden acceleration cases caused by pedal misapplication 227 Previous findings of driver error edit Car and Driver Motor Trend and Ward s Auto also compared the 2009 10 Toyota recalls to the Audi sudden acceleration cases of the 1980s which led to a widely noted media frenzy and hundreds of sudden unintended acceleration claims for Audi cars 14 In that case a 1986 segment on CBS News 60 Minutes accused the Audi 5000 sedan of unintended acceleration defects which was followed by numerous reports of tragic accidents and media expert commentary 17 At the time Audi was reported to have the highest rate of acceleration complaints 227 However the NHTSA later determined all complaints to be due to driver error 14 17 18 The Detroit News documented previous sudden unintended acceleration cases dating back to August 1978 when the NHTSA opened an investigation into General Motors for sudden acceleration concluding eight years later driver error was the likely culprit By 1986 more than 2 000 injuries had been blamed on sudden acceleration with sudden acceleration complaints totaling over 10 percent of complaints filed to the NHTSA In 1986 the NHTSA launched an investigation of the 1981 84 Toyota Cressida and an additional five other automakers By 1989 the NHTSA determined driver error was the most probable explanation for the complaints 231 NHTSA and NASA Investigation Verdict edit In February 2011 the findings of a 10 month long study conducted by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration NHTSA and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration NASA aimed to identify the main cause of sudden acceleration in Toyota and Lexus models The study was requested by the U S Congress and enlisted NASA engineers with expertise in areas such as computer controlled electronic systems electromagnetic interference and software integrity 232 The most common problem was drivers hitting the accelerator pedal when they thought they were hitting the brake which the NHTSA called pedal misapplication 232 Of the 58 cases reported 18 were dismissed out of hand Of the remaining 40 39 of them were found to have no cause the remainder being an instance of pedal entrapment One investigator says most of the cases involved pedal misapplication that is the driver stepped on the gas rather than the brake or in addition to the brake 233 The report concluded that the two mechanical safety defects that were originally identified by NHTSA are known causes of dangerous unintended acceleration 232 Litigation edit nbsp Toyota Motor Sales U S A Inc headquarters in Torrance within the Central District of California Consumers in the U S and Canada have filed numerous 234 class action lawsuits blaming the sudden acceleration problem on the electronic throttle control system ETC and alleging Toyota s negligence 235 236 As of February 26 2010 there were at least 72 lawsuits pending in U S federal courts against Toyota or its subsidiaries as a result of the 2009 10 recalls 26 237 Plaintiffs are seeking damages for personal injury or wrongful death resulting from accidents in the defective Toyota vehicles in other words product liability loss of resale value or a drop in the value of shares held by Toyota shareholders 26 Toyota has retained the law firm of Alston amp Bird to defend most of these cases 238 On April 9 2010 the U S Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation ordered consolidation of all federal actions into the Central District of California before Judge James V Selna for all pretrial motions and discovery 239 In doing so the Panel noted that these cases have attracted an unusual amount of publicity to the Panel s work 239 Although only 11 cases were directly before the JPML it also noted that the parties had notified it of more than 100 potentially related cases which can also be consolidated as so called tag along cases 239 As to why Judge Selna the Panel explained Judge Selna s 28 years of private law practice at the very highest levels and in some of the most complex cases leaves him well prepared for a case of this magnitude 239 Under federal multidistrict litigation law any cases that are not dismissed or settled during the consolidated pretrial process will be remanded to their original district court for trial The following week Judge Selna set a May 13 initial scheduling conference at his courtroom in Santa Ana California 240 He also appointed Cari Dawson chairwoman of Alston amp Bird s class action department as lead counsel for defendants On May 14 after reviewing submissions from dozens of plaintiffs attorneys Judge Selna issued an order establishing which attorneys would be granted the potentially lucrative positions of lead counsel for the plaintiffs 241 First he named nine attorneys as lead counsel for the economic loss cases and nine attorneys as lead counsel for the personal injury and wrongful death cases 241 He then named nine of the attorneys from these two panels to form a core discovery committee 241 Three additional attorneys were named as liaisons to coordinate discovery with pending state court actions and other related federal litigation in progress outside of the MDL like shareholder litigation 241 Finally one additional attorney was named as a consultant on behalf of international Toyota consumers 241 Prominent attorneys appointed on the plaintiffs side included Steve Berman of Hagens Berman Sobol Shapiro on the personal injury and wrongful death committee and Elizabeth Cabraser of Lieff Cabraser on the economic loss committee 241 Selna also clarified the roles of defense counsel by appointing Cari Dawson and Lisa Gilford of Alston amp Bird as lead counsel in the economic loss cases and Vince Galvin and Joel Smith of Bowman and Brooke as lead counsel in the personal injury and wrongful death cases 241 Gilford and Galvin were also appointed to serve as lead defense liaisons to other related cases in federal and state courts 241 On June 1 2010 Judge Selna issued another order setting out a discovery schedule He ordered both sides to make initial discovery disclosures by July 2 2010 and set out a briefing schedule for motions concerning the consolidated complaints with oral arguments set for November 19 2010 In a separate order on that same date he also ordered that all motion related documents filed by any attorney would now have to be co signed by lead counsel for that attorney s side and that lead counsel were to act as gatekeepers to cut down on the number of documents being filed with the court On July 1 2010 Judge Selna appointed two retired Presiding Justices of the California Court of Appeal as special masters John K Trotter and Steven Stone On June 10 2011 after the parties had completed some discovery Judge Selna issued an order setting trial dates of February 19 2013 and May 21 2013 for the first two bellwether trials and designated a Utah wrongful death personal injury case as the first one of 300 in progress to go to trial Toyota has also been sued for not having a brake override system on older models 101 Attorney Robert Nelson representing Jacquelyn Donoghue of Holder Nebraska the 67 year old widow of a man killed in an accident in which her model year 2006 Prius allegedly suddenly accelerated into another vehicle killing the man and seriously injuring her alleged that Toyota s failure to include a brake override on their models played a direct role in the death of John Donoghue 101 Edgar Heiskell an attorney involved with one of the lawsuits contends that electromagnetic interference with the electronic throttle control system is to blame for acceleration cases 124 Heiskell contends that Toyota models as old as 2002 are also affected According to him Toyota can t tell you that the 07 Camry they are recalling is any different from the 06 or the 03 that has the same throttle control in it 124 According to The Wall Street Journal s Holman W Jenkins Jr trial lawyers love the electronic gremlin theory because it s impossible to disprove in any individual case 15 On December 26 2012 Toyota announced it would spend more than US 1 billion to settle a class action lawsuit involving unintended acceleration by retrofitting vehicles with safety devices and compensated owners for lost resale value 242 A confidential settlement was reached in a lawsuit against Toyota involving the injury of Jean Bookout and the death of Barbara Schwarz in November 2013 243 Settlement with the U S government edit On March 19 2014 it was announced that Toyota and the U S Justice Department had reached an agreement whereby Toyota would pay a US 1 2 billion criminal penalty in exchange for deferred prosecution of wire fraud charges The agreement also subjects the car company to further independent monitoring of its safety procedures The penalty ended a four year investigation in which the Justice Department concluded that Toyota had intentionally hidden information about safety defects from the public and had made deceptive statements to protect its brand image Attorney General Eric H Holder Jr remarked Other car companies should not repeat Toyota s mistake A recall may damage a company s reputation but deceiving your customers makes that damage far more lasting The penalty is the largest ever waged against a car company 244 In a statement Toyota called the agreement difficult but a major step toward putting this unfortunate chapter behind us The company said it has made fundamental changes in its corporate structure and safety procedures since the investigation started Brake override systems are now standard on all Toyota vehicles 244 As of March 2014 several civil wrongful death and personal injury lawsuits are pending 244 Other manufacturers editMain article Sudden unintended acceleration nbsp The number of NHTSA consumer complaints of unintended acceleration per 100 000 vehicles sold in the US for the 1999 2009 model years 245 nbsp Consumer complaints unintended acceleration per 100 000 vehicles sold 2008 MY 245 nbsp Consumer complaints unintended acceleration per 312 000 vehicles sold 2008 MY 246 Toyota is not the only automobile manufacturer that has issued recalls for unintended acceleration problems In December 2009 Consumer Reports analyzed 2008 model year NHTSA data for sudden acceleration among Toyota Ford Chrysler GM Honda and Nissan finding 52 complaints involving Toyota vehicles or 41 of complaints among these makes 247 and every other major car maker is affected 193 248 Consumer Reports noted that the media publicity around Toyota led to an increase in complaints for 2008 models 249 In February 2010 National Public Radio obtained the full NHTSA database of 15 000 unintended acceleration complaints over the past decade and determined that among all manufacturers Volkswagen had the highest rate of unintended acceleration complaints in 2009 and 2008 11 5 and 21 6 per 100 000 vehicles respectively while Suzuki had the highest rate in 2007 and 2006 27 4 and 24 9 per 100 000 vehicles respectively 245 Toyota had 7 5 6 8 15 2 and 9 7 complaints per 100 000 vehicles in those years 245 According to NPR s analysis of the NHTSA database Jaguar Volvo and Honda also had high complaints depending on year 245 250 In February 2010 Edmunds com released its findings on a review of all NHTSA complaints from 2001 to the present day conducted in light of the Toyota recall crisis The review found that despite the recall during the previous decade Toyota ranked 17th among the 20 major car makes in number of complaints per vehicles sold with a lower rate of customer complaints from its U S customers than the Detroit Big Three along with Honda Subaru Hyundai Nissan Isuzu Suzuki Mazda Mitsubishi Volvo Volkswagen and BMW 251 252 Edmunds com also noted that any individual can file a NHTSA complaint without providing a Vehicle Identification Number VIN 175 which can lead to misleading statistics as not all NHTSA complaints are created equal and range from legitimate to nonsensical 13 On June 5 2010 NHTSA shut down online access to its complaint database following revelations of redundant unverifiable entries and improperly secured personal data 253 See also edit nbsp Cars portalAutomobile safety defect Event data recorder EDR Sudden unintended accelerationReferences edit a b Amended Recall Potential Floor Mat Interference with Accelerator Pedal Press release Toyota 2009 09 29 Archived from the original on 2009 12 21 a b c d e f Toyota to recall 436 000 hybrids globally document Reuters 2010 02 09 Archived from the original on 2016 03 04 Retrieved 2012 09 09 a b c Toyota Files Voluntary Safety Recall on Select Toyota Division Vehicles for Sticking Accelerator Pedal Press release Toyota 2010 01 21 Archived from the original on 2010 01 30 a b c d e f g h Toyota Announces Details of Remedy to Address Potential Accelerator Pedal Entrapment Press release Toyota 2009 11 25 Archived from the original on 2009 12 21 a b c d Toyota Begins Interim Notification to Owners Regarding Future Voluntary Safety Recall Related to Floor Mats Press release Toyota USA Newsroom 2009 11 02 Archived from the original on 2010 02 13 Retrieved 2010 02 02 a b Ramsey Jonathon 2010 01 25 Don t Forget Me January 25 2010 Web site Retrieved January 29 2010 Autoblog com Retrieved 2011 03 03 a b c d Toyota recalls up to 1 8 million cars BBC 2010 01 30 Archived from the original on 2010 01 31 Retrieved 2010 01 29 a b Haq Husna 2010 01 29 Toyota recall update dealers face full lots anxious customers The Christian Science Monitor Archived from the original on 2010 02 02 Retrieved 2010 01 30 a b c Toyota Temporarily Suspends Sales of Selected Vehicles Press release Toyota 2010 01 26 Archived from the original on 2010 02 11 Healey James R 2010 02 17 Toyota deaths reported to safety database rise to 37 USA Today Retrieved 2011 02 11 Berzon Alexandra Kahn Gabriel 2010 03 10 Toyota Complaints Surged After First Recall The Wall Street Journal Retrieved 2011 02 11 a b On State of the Union Week It s All About Obama Journalism org Archived from the original on 10 March 2011 Retrieved 2011 03 03 a b Hellwig Ed 2010 02 18 The Complaints NHTSA Doesn t Want You to See Blogs insideline com Retrieved 2011 03 03 a b c d e Editorial By Drew Winter Bad Drivers or Bad Equipment Wardsdealer com Archived from the original on 2010 12 26 Retrieved 2011 03 03 a b c Jenkins Holman W 2010 02 24 My Sudden Acceleration Nightmare The Wall Street Journal Retrieved 2011 02 11 a b c Oberman Mira 2010 02 03 AFP Is US bullying Toyota on recall Retrieved 2011 03 03 a b c d e f Toyota Recall Scandal Media Circus and Stupid Drivers Caranddriver com 4 February 2010 Retrieved 2011 03 03 it s critical to note that the lack of such a throttle kill isn t a defect It isn t Toyota s responsibility to account for every possible stupid thing people might do in a car a b c d Wild Out Of Control Toyotas Baloney Blogs motortrend com Retrieved 2011 03 03 Why it s so hard for Toyota to find out what s wrong with its vehicles The Washington Post Retrieved 2011 02 11 a b c d e f Linebaugh Kate 2010 02 25 Cause of Sudden Acceleration Proves Hard to Pinpoint The Wall Street Journal Archived from the original on 2012 01 18 Retrieved 2011 02 11 Toyota Fires Back Electronics Don t Rewire Themselves Popular Mechanics Retrieved 2011 03 03 permanent dead link NHTSA 60 unintended acceleration cases post recall fix Left Lane News Archived from the original on 2010 12 08 Retrieved 2011 03 03 Jackson Kathy 2010 03 08 Toyota Fixes are working on recalled vehicles Automotive News Retrieved 2012 01 11 a b Isidore Chris 2010 02 02 U S probes electronics in Toyota recall CNNMoney com Retrieved 2011 02 11 a b c d e Ahrens Frank 2010 03 09 Toyota demo counters claim of electronic acceleration glitch The Washington Post Retrieved 2011 02 11 a b c McEvoy Claran 2010 02 26 As Toyota Suits Mount Lawyers Seek Control of Litigation Location San Francisco Daily Journal Runaway Toyotas Cleared by U S of Electronic Flaws Bloomberg BusinessWeek 2011 02 08 Archived from the original on February 11 2011 Retrieved 2011 03 03 Jones Ashby 2011 02 09 Oh What a Feeling Study Pins Acceleration Blame on Drivers Law Blog The Wall Street Journal Retrieved 2011 03 03 a b DOT No Electronic Sudden Acceleration in Toyotas ABC News 2011 02 08 Retrieved 2012 09 09 Barr Michael Barr s testimonial slides PDF Safety Research Baker Phil 2013 11 04 Software bugs found to be cause of Toyota acceleration death San Diego Source Archived from the original on 2014 02 20 Retrieved 2014 01 24 Yoshida Junko 2013 10 23 Acceleration Case Jury Finds Toyota Liable EE Times Archived from the original on 2017 09 18 Retrieved 2014 01 24 Barrett Paul M 2013 12 16 Toyota Enters Settlement Talks Over Sudden Acceleration Lawsuits Business Week Bloomberg Archived from the original on December 16 2013 Retrieved 2014 01 24 a b c Toyota Recalls Floor Mats Car News Caranddriver com Archived from the original on 2010 03 23 Retrieved 2011 03 03 Valdes Dapena Peter 2010 01 27 Toyota recalls top 5 3 million vehicles CNN Retrieved 2011 02 11 Recall Alert 2010 Toyota Camry KickingTires Blogs cars com 2010 02 09 Archived from the original on 2010 06 18 Retrieved 2010 05 22 Recall Alert 2010 Toyota Tacoma KickingTires Blogs cars com Archived from the original on 2010 05 24 Retrieved 2010 05 22 2010 Toyota Tacoma Recalls and Notices List Retrieved 2021 08 03 Toyota Vehicles Toyota to Begin Voluntary Safety Recall on Certain 1998 2010 Model Year Siennas to Address Potential Corrosion on Spare Tire Cable Press release Toyota Motor Sales USA 2010 04 16 Archived from the original on 2010 05 23 Retrieved 2010 05 22 a b c Toyota Vehicles Toyota Recall January 2010 Gas Pedal Recall Press release Toyota Motor Sales USA Archived from the original on 2010 05 25 Retrieved 2010 05 22 Toyota announces plan to fix 34 000 Lexus GX 460 vehicles worldwide New York Post Archived from the original on 2011 11 06 Retrieved 2012 09 09 Toyota Vehicles Customer FAQs for 2003 Toyota Sequoia Recall Press release Toyota Motor Sales USA Retrieved 2010 05 22 permanent dead link Alabaster Jay 2010 05 21 Toyota recalls Lexus cars in Japan US to follow Associated Press Archived from the original on 2010 05 24 レクサスなど週明けリコールへ エンジン部品交換 トヨタ Beginning of the week Lexus recal due to Toyota Engine Parts The Wall Street Journal in Japanese 2010 07 02 Archived from the original on 2011 07 27 Retrieved 2011 02 11 Toyota recall Avalons Lexuses have steering problems The Christian Science Monitor Archived from the original on 2010 08 01 Retrieved 2011 03 03 Toyota Announces Voluntary Safety Recall on Certain Toyota Corolla and Corolla Matrix Models Press release Toyota Motor Sales USA Archived from the original on 2009 11 22 Retrieved 2011 03 03 a b c Vartabedian Ralph 2011 02 09 Sudden acceleration Sudden acceleration in Toyota vehicles is a mechanical issue not electronic U S study finds Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on 3 March 2011 Retrieved 2011 03 03 Toyota recalling 2 17 million vehicles in U S MSNBC 2011 02 24 Archived from the original on 2011 02 26 Retrieved 2011 04 23 Brennan Reilly 2009 11 04 Runaway Toyotas Fact Or Fiction Autoblog Retrieved 2015 05 28 4 Killed In Fiery Santee Crash Believed Identified 10News 2009 08 28 Retrieved 2011 03 03 Charette Robert 2009 10 18 How Hard Should It Be To Stop a Runaway Luxury Car IEEE Spectrum Risk Factor Blog Archived from the original on 2010 02 11 Retrieved 2010 01 30 Lexus Crash An Avoidable Tragedy AOL Auto 2009 12 10 911 Call Released from Crash that Prompted Initial Toyota Lexus Floor Mat Recall cardealerreviews org February 2010 Retrieved 2011 08 15 a b c Bensinger Ken Vartabedian Ralph 2009 10 25 New details in crash that prompted Toyota recall Los Angeles Times Retrieved 2011 02 11 Toyota 911 Crash Official Accident Report from Carquestions Retrieved January 25 2024 via www youtube com a b Baker Debbi Davis Kristina 2009 12 04 Prior driver of Lexus says pedal stuck U T San Diego Retrieved 2012 08 06 FR Doc E9 26265 Edocket access gpo gov Retrieved 2010 05 22 Floor mat Owner Letter sample PDF Press release Archived from the original PDF on 2009 11 22 Retrieved 2011 03 03 Toyota Executive Denies Cover Up In Probe of Runaway Cars ABC News 2009 11 05 Retrieved 2012 09 09 NHTSA Statement Concerning The Safety Recall of 3 8 million Toyota Vehicles NHTSA 110409 NHTSA Press release November 4 2009 Archived from the original on March 5 2013 Retrieved 5 November 2020 Recall information Toyota Motor Sales USA Archived from the original on 2010 02 09 Retrieved 2010 02 06 Rutherford Simon 2010 02 01 Pedal Recall Your frequently asked questions blog toyota co uk Archived from the original on 2010 02 04 Retrieved 2010 02 06 Mayounga Andre T 2018 10 23 Antecedents of recalls prevention analysis and synthesis of research on product recalls Supply Chain Forum 19 3 164 177 doi 10 1080 16258312 2018 1530575 S2CID 169860121 Toyota Announces Fix for Accelerator Pedal Entrapment Problem Nhtsa dot gov Archived from the original on 2012 09 16 Retrieved 2012 09 09 a b Toyota Adds Brake Override System To All Models After Recall Retrieved 2011 02 11 Sticky accelerator pedal prompts Toyota recall Ntdaily com 2010 02 02 Archived from the original on 2011 07 17 Retrieved 2011 03 03 Consumer Advisory Toyota Owners Advised of Actions to Take Regarding Two Separate Recalls Nhtsa dot gov Archived from the original on 2012 09 16 Retrieved 2012 09 09 Linebaugh Kate 2010 01 31 Toyota Gas Pedal Fix Clears Regulators The Wall Street Journal Retrieved 2011 02 11 Toyota opens up about pedal recall shares strategy for fix USA Today 2010 02 02 Retrieved 2011 02 11 Toyota Lexus Mat Recall Consumer Reports 2010 01 29 Archived from the original on 2010 02 02 Retrieved 2020 11 04 Massive Toyota recall extended to Europe China Canada CTV 2010 01 28 a b Webster Tom Toyota to recall eight models in Europe Autoblog com Archived from the original on 2010 02 03 Retrieved 2010 01 29 Toyota UK Accelerator Pedal Recall Toyota UK 1990 01 06 Archived from the original on 2010 06 11 Retrieved 2011 03 03 Peugeot follows Toyota in car recall BBC 2010 01 30 Archived from the original on 2010 01 31 Retrieved 2010 01 30 a b Toyota car recall may cost 2bn BBC 2010 02 02 Archived from the original on 2010 02 03 Retrieved 2010 02 02 Toyota Australia statement 2010 02 03 Archived from the original on 2010 03 13 Retrieved 2010 02 04 US Patent Accelerator pedal for motorized vehicle Aiw1 uspto gov Archived from the original on 2016 12 30 Retrieved 2011 03 03 Toyota Pressroom Toyota Motor Sales USA 2010 02 03 Archived from the original on 2010 07 10 Retrieved 2011 03 03 Massive Toyota recall centers on plastic friction device Plasticsnews com Archived from the original on 2011 07 15 Retrieved 2011 03 03 CTS Corporation Ctscorp com Archived from the original on 2011 01 29 Retrieved 2011 03 03 CTS Corp Press Releases Press release Ctscorp com 2010 01 29 Archived from the original on 2011 07 08 Retrieved 2011 03 03 Chrysler Recalls Dodge Jeep Vehicles for Pedal Flaw Bloomberg BusinessWeek 2010 06 04 Archived from the original on June 5 2010 Retrieved 2011 03 03 Sheehan Tim 2010 01 29 Toyota recall boosts rival dealers in Valley The Fresno Bee Archived from the original on 2013 01 23 Retrieved 2010 01 30 Krisher Tom Thomas Ken 2010 01 29 Toyota doesn t know when pedal repairs can be made The Seattle Times Associated Press Consumer Reports Toyota Archived from the original on 2010 02 02 Retrieved 2010 01 30 Vartabedian Ralph Bensinger Ken 2009 11 08 Runaway Toyota cases ignored Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on 2009 11 11 Retrieved 2010 01 30 a b c How To Deal With Unintended Acceleration Tech Dept Caranddriver com 31 December 2009 Retrieved 2011 03 03 Dragging Toyota Through the Media Muck Bloomberg BusinessWeek 2010 02 09 Archived from the original on February 13 2010 Retrieved 2011 03 03 a b 2010 Toyota Camry Stuck Throttle Brake Test Insideline com 2010 03 16 Retrieved 2011 03 03 a b c TUV Test Toyotas stoppen auch mit klemmendem Gaspedal Focus de Retrieved 2011 03 03 Consumer Reports Cars Blog Japan investigates reports of Prius brake problem Blogs consumerreports org 2010 02 03 Archived from the original on 2010 04 13 Retrieved 2010 05 22 Toyota woes mount as gov t examines Prius brakes Archived from the original on 2010 02 06 Toyota receives complaints over Prius brakes BBC 2010 02 03 Archived from the original on 2010 02 04 Retrieved 2010 02 03 LeBeau Phil 2010 02 03 Toyota s Prius Problem CNBC Archived from the original on 2011 06 10 Retrieved 2011 03 03 Toyota checking 2010 Prius brakes mum on recall Yahoo Associated Press 2010 02 04 Archived from the original on 2010 02 05 Retrieved 2020 11 05 Department of Transportation Addresses Toyota Safety Issues NHTSA 2020 02 04 Archived from the original on 2012 09 16 Retrieved 2020 11 05 Isidore Chris 2010 02 04 Feds probing Prius brakes CNNMoney com Archived from the original on 2010 02 07 Retrieved 2010 02 04 NHTSA memo on regenerative braking www thedetroitbureau com 2009 12 24 Retrieved 2011 03 03 Toyota planning recall of Prius in US and Japan BBC 2010 02 07 Archived from the original on 2010 02 08 Retrieved 2010 02 07 Tabuchi Hiroko 2010 02 07 Toyota Is to Recall 2010 Prius Model Cars for Brakes The New York Times Retrieved 2012 09 09 Toyota receives grand jury subpoena for documents Toledo Blade AP 2010 02 22 Retrieved 2020 11 05 a b c Sforza Teri 2010 02 08 Lawsuit seeks class action status over Toyota Prius problems Orange County Register Retrieved 2012 09 09 Newsroom Toyota Announces Voluntary Recall on 2010 Model Year Prius and 2010 Lexus HS 250h Vehicles to Update ABS Software Press release Toyota Motor Sales USA 2010 02 08 Retrieved 2011 01 30 permanent dead link Toyota Vehicles Toyota Announces Voluntary Recall on 8 000 2010 Model Year Tacoma 4WD Trucks to Inspect the Front Drive Shaft Press release Toyota Motor Sales USA 2010 02 12 Archived from the original on 4 June 2010 Retrieved 2010 05 22 Update 2 Recall Alert 2010 Toyota Tacoma News pickuptrucks com Archived from the original on 2010 05 21 Retrieved 2010 05 22 Toyota recalling all 2000 to 2003 Tundras MSNBC 2010 03 09 Archived from the original on 14 March 2010 Retrieved 2010 03 09 a b Mukai Anna Hagiwara Yuki 10 October 2012 Toyota Recalls 7 43 Million Vehicles on Faulty Window Switch Bloomberg L P Retrieved 10 October 2012 Toyota Told by Japan to Investigate Prius on Brakes Update1 Bloomberg BusinessWeek 2010 02 03 Retrieved 2010 05 22 dead link O Donnell Jayne 2010 03 16 Toyota careful not to blame drivers in sudden acceleration USA Today Retrieved 2011 02 11 Tribulations at Toyota The Search for the Gas Pedal Flaw Der Spiegel 2010 03 09 Retrieved 2011 03 03 Ross Brian Rhee Joseph Sandholm Drew 2010 01 21 Toyota Recall Reports of Runaway Car ABC News Retrieved 2020 11 05 Claims hard to prove disprove in Toyota suits The Detroit News Retrieved 2011 03 03 Toyota faces new US investigation BBC News 2010 02 18 Retrieved 2011 02 11 Raum Tom Manning Stephen 2010 02 23 Toyota recalls won t totally fix sudden surges Boston Globe Retrieved 2010 05 22 New Toyota Troubles Copycat Complaints Yahoo AP 2010 03 17 Archived from the original on 2010 03 23 Retrieved 2020 11 05 a b Prius Panic Are Toyota Recalls Creating Mass Hysteria For Drivers Fox40 com Archived from the original on 2011 07 24 Retrieved 2011 03 03 Toyota Prius could be banned The Foreigner Norway Retrieved 2010 05 22 Police indict Toyota Prius driver The Foreigner Norway 2010 03 29 Retrieved 2011 03 03 a b Toyota Creates Rapid Response System For Public Relations Anyway Thecarconnection com 2010 04 12 Retrieved 2011 03 03 Struck Mary 2010 04 16 Preliminary data points to driver error in Kohler woman s Toyota crash The Kohler Villager Archived from the original on 2011 08 10 Retrieved 2011 06 13 a b Bensinger Ken Vartabedian Ralph 2009 11 29 Data point to Toyota s throttles not floor mats Los Angeles Times Retrieved 2010 01 30 Unintended Acceleration Toyota Addresses the Issues Press release Toyota Motor Sales USA 2009 11 06 Archived from the original on 2009 11 10 Retrieved 2011 03 03 a b c d e Hyde Justin 2010 01 31 Toyota safety recalls were years in the making Detroit Free Press USA Today Retrieved 2011 02 11 Shunk Chris 2020 02 05 After NHTSA investigator hired by Toyota serious unintended acceleration cases ignored Autoblog Retrieved 2020 11 05 a b c Gardner Greg 2009 01 28 Wider brake fix is urged Detroit Free Press Archived PDF from the original on May 25 2010 Retrieved 2010 01 30 Department of Transportation National Highway Traffic Safety Administration NHTSA 2009 11 02 Denial of Motor Vehicle Defect Petition Federal Register 74 210 Retrieved 2020 11 05 Official State Farm warned NHTSA on Toyota in 07 Reuters 2010 02 08 Retrieved 2011 02 11 Ford Fusion Mercury Milan Go Under Recall Investigation for Floor Mats Wot motortrend com Retrieved 2011 03 03 Mitchell Josh 2010 06 30 Regulators Haven t Found Electronic Defects In Toyotas The Wall Street Journal Retrieved 2011 02 11 Toyota cleared of all sudden acceleration claims The Gazette Montreal Archived from the original on 2010 07 24 Retrieved 2010 07 14 a b Evans Scott DOT Report Driver Error Not Defects to Blame in Toyota Sudden Automobile Magazine Archived from the original on 17 July 2010 Retrieved 2010 07 14 a b Ramsey Mike 2010 07 30 Release of Toyota Documents Blocked Ex Official Says The Wall Street Journal Retrieved 2010 07 30 U S Department of Transportation Releases Results from NHTSA NASA Study of Unintended Acceleration in Toyota Vehicles National Highway Traffic Safety Administration NHTSA Nhtsa gov Archived from the original on 2015 11 10 Retrieved 2011 03 03 NHTSA report clears up mystery and hysteria on Toyota cars The Washington Post 2011 02 08 Retrieved 2011 03 03 NASA NASA s Toyota Study Released by Dept of Transportation Nasa gov 2011 02 08 Archived from the original on 16 March 2011 Retrieved 2011 03 03 NHTSA NASA Study of Unintended Acceleration in Toyota Vehicles National Highway Traffic Safety Administration NHTSA Nhtsa gov Archived from the original on 2011 03 20 Retrieved 2011 03 03 a b Toyota s sudden acceleration or runaway 38 minutes to the national ministry survey results Asahi Shimbun Archived from the original on 2010 04 06 Retrieved 2020 11 05 Valdes Dapena Peter 2010 02 23 Witnesses Toyota problems could be electronics CNN Archived from the original on 28 March 2010 Retrieved 2010 04 23 Lawmaker Toyota misled public over recalls MSNBC 2010 02 22 Archived from the original on 29 January 2011 Retrieved 2011 03 03 Clarification of Testimony Regarding Effectiveness of Recalls Press release Toyota Motor Sales USA Retrieved 2012 09 09 Toyota president Akio Toyoda s statement to Congress The Guardian London 2010 02 24 Retrieved 2011 02 11 Stephen Manning and Tom Raum Associated Press Writers 2010 03 02 US may require accelerator override in new cars The Seattle Times Associated Press Archived from the original on 2013 07 28 Retrieved 2012 09 09 Lichtblau Eric 2010 02 23 Lawmakers Ties to Toyota Questioned at Start of Inquiries The New York Times Retrieved 2010 04 23 Thirty one House Dems quizzing Toyota execs got UAW campaign cash Retrieved 2011 03 03 permanent dead link Daniels takes government to task over Toyota recalls 13 WTHR Wthr com Archived from the original on 2010 02 21 Retrieved 2010 05 22 Three state governors 2010 02 10 Letter to four U S House representatives PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2011 10 06 Retrieved 2010 12 01 Toyota recall and sales suspension Owram Kristine The Canadian Press January 27 2010 Maynard Micheline 2010 02 03 Stop Driving Recalled Toyotas Says Agency Chief USA Today Archived from the original on 4 February 2010 Retrieved 2010 02 03 a b The war on Toyota Financialpost com Archived from the original on 2010 02 06 Retrieved 2011 03 03 Recall U S Interests In Auto Industry Forbes 2010 02 08 Retrieved 2011 03 03 a b Allen Katie 2010 01 28 Toyota to axe 750 British jobs The Guardian London Retrieved 2010 01 29 Toyota Recall The Deep Root of the Problem Wordpress com Retrieved 2010 02 25 Toyota shares fall for 6th day as recall woes deepen The Guardian London 2008 05 07 Retrieved 2010 01 31 Recall difficulties affecting resale value of used Toyota brand vehicles permanent dead link Kristine Owram The Canadian Press 2010 01 27 Woodyard Chris 2010 02 05 Toyota recalls will cost owners in lower resale values USA Today Retrieved 2011 02 11 a b Company Holds Inaugural Meeting of Special Committee for Global Quality Press release March 30 2011 Archived from the original on 2012 08 16 Retrieved 2012 09 09 a b Kageyama Yuri 2010 02 15 Recall shows new challenges for Toyota Way Automotive Industry NZ Herald News Retrieved 2010 08 06 GM makes bid for Toyota customers The Detroit News Archived from the original on September 10 2012 Retrieved 2011 03 03 Chrysler Ford GM Hyundai Taking Advantage of Toyota Recall Frenzy with New Incentives Car and Driver Blog Blog caranddriver com Archived from the original on 2010 02 06 Retrieved 2010 05 22 Mary Lynn Smith 2010 02 10 Lawyer seeks another look at Toyota from fatal 06 crash Star Tribune Archived from the original on 2011 06 06 Retrieved 2010 06 04 The Associated Press via KSTP TV 2010 05 13 Defense exam of Camry finds throttle problems Hubbard Broadcasting Company Archived from the original on 1 June 2010 Retrieved 2010 06 04 Susanna Song and Katie Lynn for KSTP TV 2010 05 26 Man Convicted of Deadly Toyota Crash Hopes New Evidence Will Set Him Free Hubbard Broadcasting Company Archived from the original on 28 May 2010 Retrieved 2010 06 04 The Associated Press via KSTP TV 2010 03 09 Minn jurors now question verdict in Toyota crash Hubbard Broadcasting Company Archived from the original on 2011 09 27 Retrieved 2010 06 10 Gurnon Emily 2010 06 04 Victim sues over 2006 Toyota crash in St Paul The Pioneer Press Media New Group Retrieved 2010 06 10 Chapman Reg 2010 06 06 Lawsuits To Be Filed In 2006 Toyota Crash Reporting CBS Broadcasting Archived from the original on 2010 06 08 Retrieved 2010 06 10 Gurnon Emily 2010 06 30 Ramsey County attorney Koua Fong Lee does not deserve new trial in fatal Toyota crash The Pioneer Press Media New Group Retrieved 2010 07 05 Lohn Martiga 2010 08 05 Man convicted in fatal Toyota crash goes free MSNBC Archived from the original on 2010 08 06 Retrieved 2010 12 01 Minnesota judge frees man convicted in acceleration crash of Toyota CNN 2010 08 06 Retrieved 2011 02 11 With Budget as Backdrop Economy Leads the News Journalism org 2011 02 06 Archived from the original on 10 March 2011 Retrieved 2011 03 03 Jim Burress 2010 02 10 Toyota Pulls Ads from Atlanta ABC Affiliate Publicbroadcasting net Archived from the original on 2011 06 06 Retrieved 2011 03 03 Fallah Alborz 2010 02 22 Toyota Recall Reactions Fair or a witch hunt Caradvice com au Retrieved 2011 03 03 a b It s time to take a deep breath and relax on Toyota Autoweek com Archived from the original on 2011 06 22 Retrieved 2011 03 03 Wallace Ed 2010 02 11 The Real Scandal Behind the Toyota Recall Bloomberg BusinessWeek Archived from the original on February 13 2010 Retrieved 2011 03 03 Target Toyota Why the Recall Backlash Is Overblown Popularmechanics com 2010 02 09 Archived from the original on 2010 02 13 Retrieved 2011 03 03 Terence Corcoran More evidence of media thuggery against Toyota National Post Retrieved 2011 03 03 dead link a b Schmitt Bertel 89 Dead In The NHTSA Complaint Database It s A Sham The Truth about Cars Archived from the original on 5 June 2010 Retrieved 2010 06 25 Fumento Michael 2010 07 22 Why Didn t the Media Do a Better Job on Toyota Forbes Archived from the original on 25 July 2010 Retrieved 2010 07 20 Toyota U S officials investigate runaway Prius Reuters March 9 2010 Retrieved 2012 09 09 Runaway Prius More like runaway media hype Marketwatch com Retrieved 2011 03 03 Runaway Media Hype in Toyota Prius Crash Despite Media Reports Cars Never Touched Cardealerreviews org 1999 02 22 Retrieved 2011 03 03 a b c FOX40 Investigates Internet Speculation Of Hoax Surrounds Prius Driver James Sikes Fox40 com 2010 03 11 Archived from the original on 2011 07 24 Retrieved 2011 03 03 a b Fumento Michael 2010 03 12 Toyota Hybrid Horror Hoax Forbes Archived from the original on March 16 2010 Retrieved 2011 03 03 Surprise Prius Driver Is Bankrupt Wants New Car Ridelust com Archived from the original on 2011 07 15 Retrieved 2011 03 03 Hellwig Ed 2010 03 09 Was This Prius Really Out of Control Blogs insideline com Archived from the original on 2010 11 21 Retrieved 2011 03 03 Report Probe Questions Account of Runaway Prius ABC News 2010 03 13 Archived from the original on 19 February 2011 Retrieved 2011 03 03 Runaway Prius Probe Can t Verify Story CBS News 2010 03 14 Archived from the original on 4 February 2011 Retrieved 2011 02 11 59 Still Hold Favorable View of Toyota Rasmussen Reports Rasmussenreports com 2010 02 08 Retrieved 2010 05 22 23 Say Government Criticizing Toyota To Help GM Rasmussen Reports Rasmussenreports com 2010 02 12 Retrieved 2010 05 22 a b Dolan Matthew 2010 02 13 Outspoken Researcher Turns Focus to Toyota The Wall Street Journal Archived from the original on 9 March 2011 Retrieved 2011 02 11 a b Toyota Recall Fails to Address Root Cause of Many Sudden Acceleration Cases Safety Expert Says ABC News Archived from the original on 22 January 2011 Retrieved 2011 02 11 Toyota accused of not being frank on problem Detroit Free Press January 31 2010 Toyota Sudden Acceleration The Full Report Safetyresearch net 2010 02 05 Archived from the original on 2010 12 30 Retrieved 2011 03 03 a b Bensinger Ken 2010 01 22 Toyota issues new recall for 2 3 million vehicles Los Angeles Times Retrieved 2011 02 11 a b Ashley Steven 2010 01 28 What Might Cause a Gas Pedal to Become Stuck Scientific American Retrieved 2010 01 30 a b McElroy John 2010 02 24 Unintended Acceleration Beware of TV Network Fraud Autoblog com Retrieved 2011 03 03 a b Toyota Situation Provides Great Opportunity for America to Examine the Frivolous Lawsuit Epidemic Theautochannel com Retrieved 2011 03 03 Greg Gardner 2010 02 01 Toyota s problem in other vehicles Phones radios and even microwaves could cause sudden bursts of speed Detroit Free Press Archived from the original on February 3 2010 Retrieved 2011 02 11 Cosmic Rays may be Causing Unintended Acceleration in Toyotas U S News amp World Report March 17 2010 Exponent home page Exponent Archived from the original on 24 March 2010 Retrieved 2010 03 09 Linebaugh Kate 2010 02 14 Toyota Study Finds No Electronics Problem The Wall Street Journal Archived from the original on 18 April 2010 Retrieved 2010 05 22 a b c Bensinger Ken Vartabedian Ralph 2010 02 18 Toyota calls in Exponent Inc as hired gun Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on 2010 02 23 Retrieved 2010 03 09 a b c d e O Donnell Jayne Manning Stephen 2010 03 08 Toyota disputes critic who blames electronics USA Today Associated Press Retrieved 2012 09 09 a b Toyota Rebuts Professor s Study Suggesting Flaws in Electronics Bloomberg BusinessWeek 2010 03 04 Archived from the original on 16 April 2011 Retrieved 2011 03 03 Ailworth Erin 2011 02 09 US finds Toyota electronics weren t to blame in crashes The Boston Globe Boston Retrieved 2011 03 03 O Flynn Colin January 1 2021 Finding a Billion Dollar Fault Mode Circuit Cellar Retrieved June 11 2021 Toyota Recall Electronic Design Flaw Linked to Toyota Runaway Acceleration Problems Expert Says ABC News 2010 02 22 Retrieved 2010 05 22 a b Abuelsamid Sam 2010 02 23 Analysis ABC News report shouldn t panic Toyota drivers Autoblog Retrieved 2011 03 03 a b c ABC Attacks Toyota Support for Akio Toyoda Weakens Beware of Network Fraud Autoline Detroit 2010 02 23 Retrieved 2011 03 03 a b c The Mechanics of ABC News Unintended Toyota Acceleration Hoax Jalopnik com 2010 03 08 Retrieved 2012 01 12 Doing the media proud Autoweek 2010 11 03 Archived from the original on 2011 06 22 Retrieved 2011 03 03 Breaking ABC News Admits to Faking Part of Toyota Acceleration Video Autoguide com 2010 03 11 Retrieved 2011 03 03 a b c How ABC News Brian Ross Staged His Toyota Death Ride Gawker 2010 03 05 Archived from the original on 2011 10 11 Retrieved 2012 01 12 a b Bauder David 2010 03 11 2 second video causes headache for ABC News ABC News New York Archived from the original on 2013 07 28 Retrieved 2013 01 19 ABC News Toyota Test Fiasco Gawker com 2010 03 05 Archived from the original on 2010 03 07 Retrieved 2012 01 12 Adrian Kingsley Hughes 2010 02 04 Toyota s Prius problems Software hardware and the future of motoring ZDNet Retrieved 2011 02 11 Mitchell Robert L 5 February 2010 Toyota s lesson Software can be unsafe at any speed Computerworld Archived from the original on 21 February 2011 Retrieved 11 February 2011 a b c d e f Pentagon Prepares For End of Gay Ban Has Toyota Found Fix The Situation Room CNN Retrieved 2011 02 11 a b c Is Wozniak Wrong About Prius Fox News Channel 2010 02 03 Retrieved 2011 02 11 Steve Wozniak Admits He Doesn t Know How To Use Cruise Control Kind of Priuschat 2010 02 03 Retrieved 2011 03 03 Christina Zdanowicz and Wayne Drash 2010 02 11 Prius owners blame wild rides on cruise control CNN Retrieved 2011 02 11 Schweinsberg Christie 2010 03 22 Toyota Examines Prius Cruise Control Complaints Wardsauto com Archived from the original on 2011 07 17 Retrieved 2011 03 03 Recall U S Interests In Auto Industry Forbes 2010 02 08 Retrieved 2011 03 03 Leonard Evans 2010 02 04 Opinion The Lesson of Toyota s Recall Aolnews com Archived from the original on February 6 2010 Retrieved 2011 03 03 Michael Fumento Why Do Toyotas Hate the Elderly Archived 2010 06 02 at the Wayback Machine Megan McArdle How Real are the Defects in Toyota s Cars The Atlantic March 12 2010 Theodore H Frank I am not afraid of my Toyota Prius The Washington Examiner March 11 2010 Walter Olson Exorcising Toyota s Demons Archived 2010 03 16 at the Wayback Machine National Review Online March 15 2010 Carl Franzen Has Toyota Coverage Driven Public a Bit Crazy Archived 2010 03 15 at the Wayback Machine AOL News March 12 2010 a b c d e How Real are the Defects in Toyota s Cars The Atlantic 2010 03 12 Archived from the original on 2 March 2011 Retrieved 2011 03 03 Ramsey Mike 2010 08 11 U S Study Points to Driver Error in Many Toyota Crashes The Wall Street Journal Retrieved 2011 02 11 a b c d e f g h i j k l Schmidt Richard A 2010 03 11 Braking Bad The New York Times Retrieved 2011 02 11 a b c McElroy John 2010 03 12 Runaway Toyotas What about driver error Autoblog com Retrieved 2011 06 13 a b Paur Jason 2010 03 12 Operator Error Usually The Cause of Unintended Acceleration In Past Investigations Wired Retrieved 2011 06 13 Toyota Sudden Acceleration Is It All Older Drivers Fault Thecarconnection com 2010 03 15 Retrieved 2011 03 03 Runaway vehicle issue lingers The Detroit News Retrieved 2011 03 03 a b c U S Department of Transportation Releases Results from NHTSA NASA Study of Unintended Acceleration in Toyota Vehicles National Highway Traffic Safety Administration 2011 02 08 Archived from the original on 2015 11 10 Retrieved 2011 06 12 Keane Angela Greiling Ohnsman Alan 2011 02 08 Toyota Surges on Raised Profit Outlook U S Government Report Bloomberg BusinessWeek Archived from the original on February 12 2011 Retrieved 2011 03 03 Toyota Recall Lawsuits FindLaw 2010 02 11 Archived from the original on 16 February 2010 Retrieved 2010 02 11 Toyota Speed Up Suits Say Problem Goes Deeper Than Gas Pedal Bloomberg Business Week 2010 01 29 Archived from the original on February 2 2010 Retrieved 2011 02 11 Fisk Margaret Cronin 2010 02 01 Toyota Faces New Class Action Suits Over Acceleration Bloomberg Retrieved 2011 02 11 Toyota SUA Victims Call for Comprehensive Recalls Press release California PR Newswire Retrieved 2011 03 03 Amanda Bronstad Plaintiffs Lawyers Jockey for Venue in Massive Toyota Litigation The National Law Journal 11 March 2010 a b c d Transfer Order In re Toyota Motor Corp Unintended Acceleration Marketing Sales Practices and Products Liability Litigation MDL No 2151 PDF Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation US 2010 04 09 dead link Bronstad Amanda 2010 04 20 Toyota to Pay Record Fine Temporary Lead Counsel Appointed in Litigation The National Law Journal US Archived from the original on 2010 03 29 a b c d e f g h Bronstad Amanda 2010 05 17 Judge Agrees to Expand Plaintiffs Committees in Toyota MDL The National Law Journal US Retrieved 2016 09 21 Zalubowski David 2012 12 26 Toyota settlement in sudden acceleration case will top 1 billion Los Angeles Times Retrieved 2012 12 27 Hirsch Jerry Bensinger Ken 2013 10 25 Toyota settles acceleration lawsuit after 3 million verdict Los Angeles Times Retrieved 2013 11 24 a b c Vlasic Bill Apuzzo Matt 2014 03 19 Toyota Is Fined 1 2 Billion for Concealing Safety Defects The New York Times Retrieved 2014 03 20 a b c d e NPR Vehicle Acceleration Complaints Database NPR Archived from the original on 21 January 2011 Retrieved 2011 03 03 Data for the chart from The Detroit Free Press 2010 02 01 page 6A Analysis shows over 40 percent of sudden acceleration complaints involve Toyotas Consumer Reports Cars Blog Consumers Union of U S 2009 12 07 Archived from the original on 2010 04 20 Retrieved 2010 05 22 Fact Check Toyota not alone in acceleration problems CNN 2010 02 06 Archived from the original on 2010 04 08 Retrieved 2011 02 11 Consumer Reports analysis of sudden acceleration complaints Blogs consumerreports org 2009 12 07 Archived from the original on 2010 04 20 Retrieved 2011 03 03 All Things Considered Unintended Acceleration Not Limited To Toyotas NPR Archived from the original on 2011 01 27 Retrieved 2011 03 03 Edmunds Customer Complaint Data Shows Toyota Ranked 17th Archived from the original on 2010 02 13 Retrieved 2011 02 11 Toyota Recalls Put into Context Edmunds 2010 02 10 Retrieved 2016 09 21 Schmitt Bertel 5 June 2010 NHTSA Closes Barn Door Hides Evidence The Truth about Cars Retrieved 2011 02 11 External links editOfficial Toyota Recall Information amp Latest News Toyota recalls since 1977 Toyota Pressroom Toyota Recall Lawsuits FindLaw Toyota Unintended Accelerator Investigation at The Crittenden Automotive Library hearing transcripts government reports including individual crash reports Finding a Billion Dollar Fault Mode from Circuit Cellar where Colin O Flynn was able to induce a similar fault on a test bench Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 2009 2011 Toyota vehicle recalls amp oldid 1204436868, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.