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By LARRY MARGASAK and KEN THOMAS
1 U' i9 h$ r* h1 c+ C! pWashington (AP) -- The president of Toyota's U.S.
( w0 M% v; M( Qoperations acknowledged to skeptical lawmakers on Tuesday that
! G+ T( M" F, P% v( Pthe company's recalls of millions of its cars may "not totally"
- ~2 `4 D; |9 h" y2 Psolve the problem of sudden and dangerous acceleration.
5 n6 t% f: `) E. j! [0 r"We are vigilant and we continue to look for potential
% |2 H( w( f+ qcauses," Toyota's James Lentz told a congressional panel.
0 j/ j, Q" F) j5 SHowever, he repeated his company's position that unexpected. x: Y# O1 C) ^7 Q. \( z! l t& H( Q
acceleration in some of the company's most popular cars and' b2 i# f& c, M% l
trucks was caused by one of two problems -- misplaced floor! ?! l+ G# K1 r& b1 r/ t
mats and sticking accelerator pedals.. e2 z* b# v/ Y' F2 ~* q
He insisted electronic systems connected to the gas pedal# L9 T% ^0 z7 ^* V9 a+ f4 F
and fuel line did not contribute to the problem, drawing sharp z( s) _' }1 o M5 _( R' F
criticism from lawmakers who said such a possibility should be
: q* N+ A9 D0 ~2 {1 S3 afurther explored -- and from a tearful woman driver who could
4 ~6 R9 M& Q# k8 A9 d$ T+ C0 ]not stop her runaway Lexus.$ s: q# e8 | r$ O5 e) P
"Shame on you, Toyota," Rhonda Smith, of Sevierville,
) A" F4 v( p" \' v m0 {Tenn., said at a congressional hearing. Then she added a second8 v1 K+ \3 G7 Z( P0 B- v. o3 E6 i- _
"shame on you" directed at federal highway safety regulators." v: B' q' v# o
Texas Republican Rep. Joe Barton cautioned his colleagues7 W- L; c$ l( ~- r; J, j
early in the hearing against conducting a "witch hunt" and said+ d5 x/ q1 P# K3 }
"We don't want to just assume automatically that Toyota has, F1 G: Y2 `1 B1 d( W
done something wrong and has tried to cover it up." But midway" D; X6 X; C' F! O: Y4 \! x* R
through Lentz's testimony, Barton said of Toyota's5 R- N* e3 a2 |- n! W0 S( @. }2 z! b
investigation of the problems: "In my opinion, it's a sham."
6 ]8 j$ O q. a- ~Lentz said the company had not completely ruled out an. d7 x2 G# l; f$ t2 k" p
electronics malfunction and was still investigating causes of
( {. J o- E0 ~: P# `the sudden acceleration. Still, "We have not found a
' U; c! o$ G$ D, Zmalfunction" in the electronics of any of the cars at issue, he
1 l! L' ^8 R; Q5 K1 W0 Gsaid.
( Z& p _1 }& @0 VAs to Smith's harrowing story, "I'm embarrassed for what
' \" u2 v& b7 I, U* f8 s- \happened," Lentz said. "I want her and her husband to feel safe/ D% S% _% V- D
about driving our products," Lentz said.
; ~6 |' j, m, Q. rThree congressional panels are investigating Toyota's
, }6 z' l- A, r; v+ W/ E- Kproblems, which affect a huge number of Americans. Toyota has
0 @3 _6 ` Z- M9 | rrecalled some 8.5 million vehicles worldwide -- more than 6
% C8 N9 b4 y: p' J/ fmillion in the United States -- since last fall because of
6 ]3 ]' a0 {1 xunintended acceleration problems in multiple models and braking- i; O: f( z3 [, I0 P
issues in the Prius hybrid. It is also investigating steering$ q/ A0 Y" b- J4 S
concerns in Corollas. People with Toyotas have complained of% R; H4 E; L6 C! e( d, X6 n: o
their vehicles speeding out of control despite efforts to slow I$ O2 w, Q% S$ e5 f4 p( o
down, sometimes resulting in deadly crashes. The government has5 s) l% g" j+ V$ v8 G* u
received complaints of 34 deaths linked to sudden acceleration: k8 L5 C: i+ Y. Z% ]1 w
of Toyota vehicles since 2000.$ {: I/ m8 L; j% Z. x; e
Lentz, who choked up while discussing the death of his own+ p! ?, j& K4 t2 E
brother more than 20 years ago in a car accident, said he
, f" K+ K3 e3 y: f/ _% q- Z4 H2 Runderstood the pain.
+ Q7 u j& h/ @"I know what those families go through," he said.+ }5 ]' F/ _$ N d- K
Lentz has said in the past that he was confident Toyota's6 j7 K, d* }. [! W: Y
fixes on the recalled vehicles would correct the problems.! A* F1 o' _$ k2 f1 J
But when pressed by Energy and Commerce Committee Chairman/ L! n2 l, h% ]2 L" O# }
Henry Waxman, D-Calif., on whether the two recalls Toyota put
' |- Z1 e5 g& U. J b# G8 |in place to deal with the issue would completely solve it, ~! k2 G& \4 O b5 R
Lentz replied: "Not totally.". M! O- n4 e2 L' d5 J$ }4 }! a
Still, he said chances of unintended accelerations were: P- n/ \, W+ l4 H
"very, very slim" once the recall was complete. Lentz also said( ?% m0 g7 I1 S8 j: z
Toyota was putting in new brakes that can override the gas
" I" S- l: K, F% K* Spedal on almost all of its new vehicles and a majority of its
& D% i# `- }9 c' C1 Dvehicles already on the road.
- \3 Z0 c2 I3 B; D4 nMeanwhile, Toyota president Akio Toyoda, who will testify
5 a& D; n% X1 [/ m Xbefore a separate panel on Wednesday, said he took "full- H: b1 P* G" `8 C+ Z$ C0 w8 o/ R6 n" a
responsibility" for the uncertainty felt by Toyota owners and
! _" ?" v/ [; Q' Noffered his condolences to a San Diego, Calif., family who were
0 o; `+ e8 x( ^# C, K: p4 ?. ?: Ikilled in late August, reigniting interest in the problems.7 `. G7 Z5 i9 |# Z& w/ g
"I will do everything in my power to ensure that such a
: H% [1 a+ n* w+ Qtragedy never happens again," Toyoda said in prepared testimony
' u' y/ o( u0 l; W9 afor Wednesday's hearing to the House Government Oversight
" K* F$ b# a3 i6 C5 G4 bCommittee. "My name is on every car. You have my personal8 z7 U& h, o6 ]/ f' D# y) `
commitment that Toyota will work vigorously and unceasingly to8 ~! y" L8 Y+ X6 E. X
restore the trust of our customers."
. q5 m$ \% ?1 t4 [Lawmakers heard a brief, but riveting, deion from5 a. O. \4 U- K+ U4 x4 E' X
Smith, the Tennessee woman whose Toyota-made Lexus suddenly
, d; M6 _8 d; M8 f( d4 I( Nzoomed to 100 miles per hour as she tried to get it to stop --9 V+ z. c- y' A/ V0 p
shifting to neutral, trying to throw the car into reverse and
( v9 E, Y0 u9 Z3 q( O) }# b0 L8 shitting the emergency brake. Finally, her car slowed enough- A. N6 S6 m- h }6 B# `- |
that she was able to pull it off the road onto the median and+ F1 ~' U7 y# k' n; K5 u
turn off the engine.; S! T$ r0 y3 z9 C
Fighting back tears, she described her nightmare ride of
0 G' S5 {" g, v/ tOctober 2006, calling it "a near death experience."$ J: ]/ r/ a U! W
"After six miles, God intervened" and slowed the car, she1 p: k9 f% N- b
said. She added that it took a long time for Toyota to respond- G# ?# W$ z" B$ _9 p" A, P6 y
to her complaints.5 e. a3 }' E% ^ R" Z/ T3 Q
In an often contentious full day of testimony, lawmakers
4 u6 ?* N- P) f! Nreturned again and again to the question of whether electronic; B/ c$ t. q" f( o B
malfunctions may have contributed to the speeding cars.
# Q/ l/ K9 b" m5 W# ~4 U& G"We are confident that no problems exist with the electric
# A4 x* A3 _8 s; @% othrottle control system in our vehicles," Lentz said. He cited
; A$ i& b( {4 U6 C"fail-safe mechanisms" in the cars that were designed to shut
& ]0 i. I& M$ E5 X: a" t+ Noff or reduce engine power "in the event of a system failure."
% E k* L- l O7 ?2 E# VTransportation Secretary Ray LaHood told the panel in
3 j% R$ p9 Q1 Z) q' lprepared testimony that possible electronics problems were) V) X% A) y/ P2 i$ m I
being looked into by his agency. He said the company's recalls
8 Q) _4 K, v4 p0 w7 o7 dwere important steps but "we don't maintain that they answer' H a! Y9 |5 ?( |* f
every question."- j) ?' Y$ T( s3 l+ V
Toyota hired a consulting firm to analyze whether
0 g n0 c! f1 ?3 S4 b4 g4 Y# welectronic problems could cause unintended acceleration. The( h# Z: S0 d2 `1 F" E) {" n
firm, Exponent Inc., found no link between the two. But m+ k7 j' _& O* t
committee investigators said the testing studied only a small
( q: g" P* Y, L6 n1 o+ R) F9 l9 ?' t; [number of vehicles
: b% i a4 D( r3 f3 QTracking down an electrical problem can be far more
2 X, Y. K- u& C% {/ ~0 J% O8 u' ~difficult, expensive and time-consuming than finding a/ R) w! d; p( }+ n3 m9 F6 g
mechanical problem. Electrical problems can have more than one
) n t5 B8 N3 _, ksource, and they can come from inside or outside the car.
. A5 f( J& G( @) Y/ j q& PMechanical problems often leave clues such as physical damage,
, q+ m4 e* W) M1 y/ twhere electronic troubles can be hidden in software or leave no" K; u1 u1 f- @# c; a/ n$ H, g
trace at all.
! E) |$ f8 R1 q7 K: c. H- aHouse investigators who reviewed Toyota's customer call
& p r" U1 v7 Q8 m2 V- pdatabase found that 70 percent of the complaints of sudden# ]; ?0 M# ?& \; ^4 E2 C, S I
acceleration were for vehicles that are not subject to the- ]! o2 l+ @3 U8 Q; x7 p. Q4 u
recalls over floor mats or sticky pedals.( d) ~3 W1 D" y2 O- [7 X3 L1 I8 j. n4 a
Rep. Bart Stupak, D-Mich., chairman of the subcommittee,
/ e) O" P/ h- P6 asaid Toyota "misled the American public by saying that they and& M5 \" M5 {5 y# R' C W
other independent sources had thoroughly analyzed the/ f( S0 {1 s/ [. N
electronics systems and eliminated electronics as a possible! s( r7 a: x. y$ C3 }$ |/ l0 C
cause of sudden unintended acceleration when, in fact, the only
$ M6 Z2 y; b6 ~ u! @/ hsuch review was a flawed study conducted by a company retained! P; x o5 @) N8 t
by Toyota's lawyers."
! n& z6 f% o# tLentz apologized anew for the company's slow handling of
& h% T: C7 S' _1 z4 v Mproblems. "We have not lived up to the high standards our
; P- ? e" [ @+ ~+ p8 A- [customers and the public have come to expect from Toyota," he: T2 r2 M3 w ?* w8 q$ s* k* Q
said.
, [& s5 b, X9 `: N9 R( Z7 W"Put simply, it has taken us too long to come to grips with
1 c' t& L1 x; Wa rare but serious set of safety issues, despite all of our, K' V' Q' H' C# ]% S- A& T
good faith efforts," said Lentz, president and chief operating
9 D: h4 ]6 ^% Q( J% u2 Q/ iofficer of Toyota Motor Sales USA. Inc.
' z( o9 R% a0 g3 c6 V# w2 ?; NSeparately, among hundreds of Toyota dealers lobbying- L, u( x* x" R+ G
members of Congress Tuesday, there seemed to be widespread
8 e5 w2 K$ Y- h- \+ M5 N# ~rancor toward a federal government they view as picking on the# K4 Y1 s# x9 O5 s; w
automaker, at least in part because of the government's
4 S+ a. j6 @3 |; N& einvestment of billions of dollars in General Motors and+ X; F& {, H" n- i# U
Chrysler.
6 d7 j1 u/ D, W/ D4 w& }4 f"That's hard for me as a citizen to understand why my tax
: k* Z7 v0 b0 @ k5 e9 t! J2 edollars are going in that direction," Paul Atkinson, a4 L' q0 S' L) T/ q9 C
Houston-area Toyota dealer, said at a news conference that also" D: @+ j' I$ n5 [0 P/ X3 F+ ?
served as a pep rally for the visiting dealers. "To compete
$ l# s- }9 _' C) ?+ ]' Q8 [, {, Cwith the government as an individual entrepreneur is pretty/ h" z- d" w: ?. E* F( f! `$ p9 }% C
tough.". V; F8 a( J1 f* T
---
. y- W; P# O' E/ Y% U ^ @0 `% [Associated Press writers Alan Fram, Stephen Manning and Tom
9 f+ Y1 m9 G J9 kRaum in Washington and Tom Krisher in Detroit contributed to7 _, m+ M R: F* U7 T# l
this story.* p5 K! e! }# d& n% b) d$ v
5 F( P' c4 w. f8 U; B# ?/ p
-0- Feb/23/2010 21:04 GMT |
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