Europeans warned of toyota pedals before us
Europeans warned of toyota pedals before us"
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Long before TOYOTA told U.S. regulators about sticking accelerator pedals, the Japanese automaker warned its distributors throughout Europe about similar problems, documents obtained by The
Associated Press show. A Tacoma pickup truck on the lot of a Toyota dealership. David Zalubowski Concerns about sticking gas pedals and complaints from Toyota owners in the U.S. were rising
at the end of 2009. The documents show that weeks earlier, on Sept. 29, its European division issued technical information "identifying a production improvement and repair procedure to
address complaints by customers in those countries of sticking accelerator pedals, sudden rpm increase and/or sudden vehicle acceleration." Distributors throughout Europe and in Russia,
Georgia, Kazakhstan, Turkey and Israel received the technical information. In assessing a record $16.4 million fine on Toyota for failing to alert the U.S. government to the safety problems
quickly enough, Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood cited the warnings to the other countries. LaHood said Tuesday that Toyota made a "huge mistake" by not disclosing the safety
problems sooner. The timeline in the documents shows that Toyota said in October it had received three reports of sticking pedals in Corollas sold in the United States. It notified the
National Highway Traffic Safety Administration about the cases in November. In November and December, Toyota engineers examined pedals from the Corollas and were able to replicate the
sticking pedal problem in two of the three cases. The engineers "concluded that the phenomenon experienced in the United States was essentially the same as the phenomenon experienced in
Europe," the document said. In mid-January, Toyota held internal meetings "to discuss status of production changes and to prepare for meetings with NHTSA" on Jan. 19,
according to the timeline. Two days later, Toyota announced it would recall 2.3 million vehicles to address the sticking pedals. The documents obtained by the AP were among 70,000 pages of
papers turned over to government investigators. They show that on Sept. 29, the same day Toyota issued the repair procedures in Europe, the company told NHTSA of its decision to recall
several Toyota and Lexus vehicle models "to address the risk of accelerator pedal entrapment by all-weather floor mats." Toyota has said the problems involved separate issues, and
in the case of the sticking gas pedals, the problem was related to the buildup of condensation on sliding surfaces in the accelerator system that helps drivers push down or release the gas
pedal. The timelines, titled "preliminary chronology of principal events," were provided to the government on March 24. LaHood told reporters in Chicago on Tuesday that he
wouldn't be surprised if a review of documents from Toyota Motor uncovered additional safety lapses by the Japanese automaker. "This is the first thing that we have found,"
LaHood said. "It may not be the last thing." Under federal law, automakers must notify NHTSA within five days of determining that a safety defect exists and promptly conduct a
recall. Toyota, in a statement Tuesday, said it "has and will continue to practice its philosophy of satisfying consumers with high quality vehicles that are safe and reliable, and
responding to consumer feedback with honesty and integrity." Toyota has recalled more than 6 million vehicles in the U.S. and a total of more than 8 million worldwide because of
acceleration problems in multiple models and braking issues in the Prius hybrid. The Japanese automaker was still weighing its options Tuesday about whether to accept or contest the fine. It
has also been named in 138 potential class-action lawsuits over falling vehicle values and nearly 100 personal injury and wrongful death cases in federal courts. * Slideshow: Hot New Cars
at the 2010 New York Auto Show
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