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Previous Posts
- Toyota cozy with Safety Watchdog
- Toyota- Shim or Sham?
- 'FRONTLINE' TO DISCUSS COLGAN AIR CRASH
- Toyota Prius recall imminent
- Prius problems
- FAA CRITICIZED FOR COLGAN CRASH RESPONSE
- U.S. had to force Toyota into safety recall
- Toyota finally acknowledges deadly defect
- Trucker watching porn when fatal crash occurred
- Texting while driving big rigs BANNED!
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John Feroleto, Personal Injury Attorney Blog
Monday, February 15, 2010
Toyota cozy with Safety Watchdog
Four unintended acceleration investigations of Toyota vehicles by the NHSTA were ended with the help of former NHTSA regulators hired by Toyota, warding off possible recalls, court and government records show.
Christopher Tinto and Christopher Santucci worked to persuade the NHSTA to end or limit probes.
"Toyota bamboozled NHTSA or NHTSA was bamboozled by itself,” said Joan Claybrook, an auto safety advocate and former NHTSA administrator in the Carter administration. “I think there is going to be a lot of heat on NHTSA over this.” See Bloomberg.Com
The point is if a vehicle isn't recalled, don't assume it is maufactured correctly. John Feroleto
Labels: NHSTA, Toyota, unintended acceleration
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Thursday, February 11, 2010
Toyota- Shim or Sham?

The Toyota sudden acceleration "fix" is sliding in a shim, a small piece of metal to the brake system. But the defect may be in the cars complex electrical system.
Michael Pecht , a professor at Maryland's Clark School of Engineering , an expert in failure analysis and has written a book on sudden acceleration in automobiles, believes complicated electronics , not a mechanical issue with the gas pedal is the core of Toyota's problems.
Sean Kane, of Safety Research Strategies in Massachusetts, said, "Toyota's explanations do not account for the share of unintended acceleration complaints that we have examined." It is likely an electrical glitch or computer problem(as in Prius brakes) would be a worse PR nightmare for Toyota. John Feroleto
Labels: Prius, product safety, sudden acceleration, Toyota shim
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Trucking Accidents
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5:19 AM
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Tuesday, February 9, 2010
'FRONTLINE' TO DISCUSS COLGAN AIR CRASH
Quoting congressional investigator Clay Foushee regarding the crash, the article stated "It's become the symbol of everything that's wrong with the [airline] industry....For this decade, it is the watershed accident."
This program will examine Colgan's priority of placing profits over safety concerns, in addition to inadequate pilot training and fatigue issue. Regional airlines now account for more than half of all commercial flights and therefore the concern for the safety of regional airlines should be grater than ever. Paul Becker.
Labels: accident, airline safety, crash, plane crash
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Monday, February 8, 2010
Toyota Prius recall imminent
It is likely the recall would not have occurred now, but Toyota is concerned about another repair- its reputation for safety.
Many dangerous products don't get recalled because they don't get news coverage. The Detroit Free Press is following the unfolding story well. John Feroleto
Labels: Prius, product liability, recalls, Toyota
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6:03 PM
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Friday, February 5, 2010
Prius problems
“Users are noticing defects and there have been accidents,” the Japanese transport minister, Seiji Maehara, said today. “This leads me to believe Toyota has not put consumers first.”
It is believed the Japanese government has ordered Toyota to investigate the Prius brakes and is pressing for a recall. Thursday the NHTSA announced it would open an investigation into the car’s brakes. John Feroleto
Labels: sudden acceleration, Toyota, Toyota brakes
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Thursday, February 4, 2010
FAA CRITICIZED FOR COLGAN CRASH RESPONSE
Labels: airline safety, airplane, buffalo plane crash, government
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8:38 AM
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Wednesday, February 3, 2010
U.S. had to force Toyota into safety recall
"We're not finished with Toyota and are continuing to review possible defects and monitor the implementation of the recalls." He was likely referring to a concern over possible electronic cause- a subject of a future blog.
Also, the subject of a future blog is a problem with the Prius braking/wheel system which will likely be developing in the press.
LaHood told the Associated Press Toyota was "a little safety deaf." More: Detroit Free Press John Feroleto
Labels: Prius, Ray LaHood, recalls, Safety Recall, sudden acceleration, Toyota recall floor pan design
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5:58 AM
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Monday, February 1, 2010
Toyota finally acknowledges deadly defect
Since at least 2002 Toyota has known of a deadly defect, sudden unstoppable acceleration. After government investigations and at least 2000 complaints Toyota is beginning a massive recall.
It would have been much cheaper for the corporation to address the product defect sooner. Shouldn't protecting the public be more important? The NYTimes has a good article. John Feroleto
Labels: product liability, product safety, Profits over People
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6:47 AM
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