Articles Posted in Dangerous/Defective Products

toyota.jpgThe National Highway Traffic Safety Administration and other organizations have been compiling Toyota unintended acceleration data for years. The following is the most up to date data I could find of reported Toyota incidents from 1999 to present:

Total Incidents – 2262

Crashes – 815

toyotarecall2.jpgABC news reports that Toyota has just announced a recall of an additional 2.3 million vehicles to correct sticking acceleration pedals. This announcement follows the already massive recall launched this past fall involving 4.2 million cars. Numerous deaths and injuries have been reported as a result of Toyota vehicles unexpectedly accelerating. Initially, Toyota claimed the acceleration problem was the result of defective floor mats. Toyota is now acknowledging the problem is not limited to floor mats. The newest Toyota recall is confined to the following vehicles:

• 2009-2010 RAV4,

• 2009-2010 Corolla,

crash1.jpgAs much time as we spend in our cars in cities like Atlanta, Georgia, auto accidents are going to continue to be an unfortunate fact of life. It comes as no suprise that in every leading consumer survey safety is always among the top concerns with American consumers. As a Georgia Personal Injury and Product Liability Lawyer, I’m always interested in the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety’s annual report.

Now available are the Institute’s Top Safety Picks for 2010. The institute’s findings rate vehicles good, acceptable, marginal, and poor based on performance in high-speed front and side crash tests, a rollover test, plus evaluations of seat/head restraints for protection against neck injuries in rear impacts to determine the vehicles overall crashworthiness. Compared to prior years, far fewer vehicles received safety awards this year. Several manufacturers had cars fail the overall crash test in this year’s review. Of particular concern, many of the vehicles tested rated poor in the roof strength rating.

The roof strength test is a new criteria IIHS is using for 2010. When vehicles built with weak roofs roll over, death and paralyzation are common occurances. Product liability litigation has brought to light the catastrophic injuries and deaths caused by defectively weak roof designs. With experts estimating costs as low as $50-$150 per vehicle to build significantly safer roofs, it is encouraging to see the leading safety studies including roof strength tests in their overall analysis.

We are constantly hearing about product recalls warning the public of products that turned out to have design flaws or unexpected problems. However, a more troubling fact is that many corporations know their products can cause serious injury or death and sell them anyway, even when there is an easy and inexpensive solution that will make the product safer.

The American Association for Justice has recently issued a report documenting true stories of corporations that knowingly sold defective products to American consumers and the devastating consequences caused by these products. Here are a few of these shocking true stories.

• A pharmaceutical company that discovers that its drug causes severe side effects in pediatric patients…and then spends hundreds of millions of dollars marketing to children.

• A company that discovers its medical device is little more than a bomb waiting to go off in people’s hearts…and then decides not to tell anyone.

• A car company that discovers that if it does not spend $11 dollars per car to fix a defect, hundreds of people will be horribly burned…and decides it would be cheaper to let them burn.

• A company that discovers its bulletproof vests are defective…and then sells them anyway to be worn by law enforcement, the military, and the President of the United States.

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