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VIDEO
Lieff Cabraser attorneys Robert J. Nelson and Scott Nealey
discuss a wrongful death lawsuit based on a transmission
defect in millions of Chrysler vehicles.
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Ford Cruise Control Switch Fires - Summary of News |
Ford vehicle owners who suffered substantial
property losses or were injured in a fire should click
here to contact a Ford fire recall lawyer. |
August 3, 2007 |
MSNBC.com, "Ford
recalls 3.6 million vehicles over switch; Cruise control
in more than a dozen models from ’92 to ’04
linked to fires" |
Ford Motor Co. said Friday it
is recalling 3.6 million passenger cars, trucks, sport
utility vehicles and vans to address concerns about a
cruise control switch that has led to previous recalls
based on reports of fires. Ford said the recall covered
more than a dozen vehicle models built from 1992-2004.
The company said it was responding to concerns from owners
about the safety of their cars and questions about the
speed control deactivation switch in the vehicles that
is powered at all times.
The Dearborn, Mich.-based automaker previously had
recalled nearly 6 million vehicles beginning in January
2005 because of engine fires linked to the cruise control
systems in trucks, SUVs and vans. "Customers remain
concerned about the long-term durability of the speed control
system and about the safety of their vehicles," said
Ford spokesman Dan Jarvis.
He said the automaker had received "a few reports
of fires" in Ford Crown Victoria passenger cars prior
to the recall. He did not have a precise number. The recall
involves the following vehicles: 1998-2002 Ford Ranger,
1992-1997 Lincoln Town Car, 1992-1997 Ford Crown Victoria,
1992-1997 Mercury Grand Marquis, 1993-1998 Lincoln Mark
VIII, 1993-1995 Taurus SHO, 1999-2001 Ford Explorer and
Mercury Mountaineer.
Also covered are the 2001-2002 Ford Explorer Sport,
2001-2002 Ford Explorer Sport Trac, 1992-1993 E150-350
vans, 1997-2002 E150-350 vans, 1993 Ford F-Series pickups,
1993 Ford Bronco, 1994 Mercury Capri, 2003-2004 Ford F-150
Lightning, and 1995-2002 Ford F53 motor homes. An additional
177,000 vehicles in Canada, Mexico and Europe are covered
by the recall. It was Ford’s sixth recall, involving
a total of more than 10.4 million vehicles, conducted since
1999 because of problems with the speed control system,
according to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.
The nation’s largest single recall involved 7.9 million
Ford vehicles in 1996 to replace an ignition switch.
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March 6, 2007 |
Detroit News, "Texan's
death rekindles Ford switch issue; Family of retiree
files suit blaming component linked with engine fires" |
Al Gavegan Sr.'s death in a house fire
last summer left family and friends in San Antonio searching
for answers -- and they say the evidence leads straight
to Ford Motor Co. and a faulty electrical switch.
The retired government contractor was well-known as the
guy who operated the time clock at high school football
games and taught kids with special needs. On birthdays,
he asked friends to forgo gifts in favor of teddy bears
he could donate to sick children at a local hospital. Hundreds
attended his funeral after the 76-year-old died Aug. 14
in a blaze that started when a late-night fire spread from
his 1994 Mercury Marquis parked in his attached garage,
investigators found.
A police report listed the fire's probable cause as "an
electrical malfunction in the engine compartment of the
vehicle." Gavegan's family soon discovered that his
Grand Marquis was one of 16 million Ford vehicles built
with an electrical switch that has been linked to nearly
550 fires and about 1,500 complaints.
Since 1999, Ford has recalled 6.85 million vehicles with
the switches, making it one of the largest auto safety
recalls in U.S. history. On Monday, Ford again expanded
the recall of vehicles with the speed control switches
in question. The latest recall included 155,000 2003 model
SUVs and pickup trucks. But millions of vehicles with the
switch, including Gavegan's Grand Marquis, have not been
recalled.
Despite five recalls and an exhaustive federal safety investigation,
Ford has been unable to put an end to switch issue. Ford
faces more than 20 lawsuits around the country -- including
a wrongful death lawsuit to be filed today by the Gavegan
family in Bexar County Court in Texas.
Ford said its decision not to recall all 16 million vehicles
with the switches is based on a National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration investigation and its own research
that show only certain vehicles with the switches are at
risk of catching fire. Ford, which initially denied that
the switches were defective, says an "interaction" between
faulty switches and their placement in certain vehicles
is to blame, not the switches alone.
The switch is used to deactivate a vehicle's cruise control
when a driver taps a brake pedal. Most of the suits allege
fires began well after the vehicles were turned off.
Ford stopped using the $21 Texas Instruments switch in
2002 after a decade of use. In 1999, the company recalled
the 1992 and 1993 Mercury Grand Marquis models to replace
the switch, but not the 1994 model that Gavegan drove.
Ford says a specific batch of switches were to blame.
Mark
Chalos, a Nashville lawyer representing the Gavegan family,
contends there was no significant engineering difference between
the 1993 and 1994 Grand Marquis. "These companies have known
for years about the fire dangers of these switches. They have
chosen not to recall affected vehicles," Chalos said Monday.
The Gavegans' suit also names Texas Instruments Inc. The
company sold the division that made the switches in 2006
to Sensata Technologies. Of the 6.85 million vehicles recalled,
Ford has fixed 45 percent.
A key reason the switches are a fire hazard is that they
have electricity running through them after vehicles are
shut off. The fix dealers install is a fused wiring harness
to prevent a fire from starting. |
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August 3, 2006 |
San Francisco Chronicle, "Ford
Issues Recall, Sees 2Q Loss" |
Ford Motor Co., already reeling from
business setbacks, recalled 1.2 million trucks, sport
utility vehicles and vans Thursday amid concerns about
potential engine fires. Ford said the recall
was tied to the speed control deactivation switch system,
which could corrode over time, overheat and ignite. It
builds upon one of the largest recalls in U.S. history.
The recall involves vehicles fueled by gasoline or natural
gas and equipped with speed control, including the 1994-2002
F-250, F-350, F-450 and F-550 F-Super Duty trucks, 2000-2002
Excursion SUVs, 1994-1996 Econoline vans and 1996-2002
E-450 vans, and 1998 Explorers and Mountaineers. The recall
does not involve similar vehicles fueled by diesel.
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration said
Thursday it closed a nearly two-year investigation into
the cause of the fires. The agency has received 1,472 complaints
connected to the problems, including 65 reports of fires. NHTSA
said there have been no confirmed deaths or injuries, but
lawsuits have been filed over three deaths in Iowa, Georgia
and Arkansas, allegedly connected to vehicle fires. |
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September 7, 2005 |
CNN/Money, "Ford
recalling 3.8 million vehicles; Trucks and SUVs recalled
for cruise control switch that could cause fires" |
Ford Motor Co. is recalling about 3.8
million trucks and SUVs to fix a cruise control switch
that could overheat and burn even when the vehicles are
not running.
The switches were the subject of a recent CNN investigation.
Ford said that its investigation found that brake fluid
could leak into electronical components of the speed control
system causing them to corrode.
"In rare cases, the corrosion in the electrical components
can lead to increasing resistance and higher electrical
current flow through the system. Together, these conditions
could lead to overheating and, possibly, a fire at the
switch," the company said in announcing the recall. |
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August
15, 2005 |
WFMY News (Greensboro, NC), "Ford
Trucks Catch Fire, Not Attention; Laura Voos saved
the house but not the truck" |
Owners of thousands of Ford light trucks
have a bigger concern than high fuel prices, their vehicles
could catch fire. Even though they've been warned and
offered a repair, CBS News reports that some of the owners
are not doing anything about it.
Laura Voos says her Ford pickup was parked and locked last
week when it suddenly burst into flames in her Texas driveway. "It
was already getting the eaves on the garage when I came
out," said Voos of the fire. She managed to save the
house but not the truck, which is now a burned mass of
metal. More than 400 Ford vehicles have caught fire since
2000 and at least three people have died.
Ford identified the culprit in some of the fires as the
cruise control switch. In February, they began recalling
800,000 pickups, Expeditions and Navigators. The big question
for federal safety investigators is whether millions more
Ford vehicles that used similar switches all the way up
until 2003 should also be recalled. |
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July 23, 2005 |
The New York Times, "A
Wider Inquiry on Fires in Ford Trucks" |
As Ford Motor faces numerous lawsuits
and tries to determine why hundreds of its trucks have
burst into flames, federal authorities have widened their
investigation into whether a faulty cruise control switch
is causing the fires.
The families of two people killed in fires that the families
say erupted from the trucks have sued Ford, and a third
family is expected to file a wrongful-death suit next week.
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration has
also stepped up pressure on Ford, expanding its investigation
to include more than 3.7 million Lincoln Navigators, Ford
Expeditions and F-150 pickup trucks, the nation's best-selling
vehicle.
The investigation centers on a switch in the trucks that
disables the cruise control when the driver steps on the
brake pedal. The safety administration is investigating
the possibility that flammable hydraulic fluid is somehow
leaking into the electrical component of the switch and
sparking the fires. The agency has received reports of
512 fires across the country that may be tied to the switches.
Lawyers representing the families of three people who died
in fires linked to the trucks say the switches are to blame. |
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July 17, 2005 |
The Detroit News, "Safety
Agency Widens Investigation; NHTSA awaits Ford's internal
report into the questionable part, which is in 16 million
vehicles" |
With reports of vehicle fires
mounting, Ford Motor Co. is racing to meet a mid-August
deadline to provide federal investigators with details
of its analysis of faulty cruise-control deactivation
switches. More than 500 fires have been reported to the
National Highway Traffic Safety Administration in Ford
F-150 pickups, and Ford Expedition and Lincoln Navigator
SUVs.
In January, Ford announced it was recalling more
than 700,000 pickups and SUVs to disconnect switches in
the engine compartment that could overheat and cause fires.
In March, NHTSA opened a broader investigation into 3.7
million additional vehicles with potentially the same problem.
A NHTSA spokesman said this week that the agency
is deeply involved in its investigation of the switches,
but is awaiting Ford's internal data on switch failures. "We
sent Ford a very detailed information request, which they
have until mid-August to respond to," said NHTSA spokesman
Rae Tyson. As many as 16 million Ford vehicles have switches
similar to those in the recalled pickups and SUVs. But
NHTSA has yet to make public its analysis of other vehicles,
and doesn't expect to do so soon.
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July 17, 2005 |
The Detroit News, "Danger
Under the Hood; A little girl dies; attention turns
to a faulty Ford part; More than 500 fires reported
in pickups, SUVs; probe centers on cruise-control switch" |
The noise woke Tanika Washington just
before dawn, a sound like heavy raindrops beating on
the roof. But when she sat up in bed, she realized it
was the crackling of fire. "I think something's
burning," she said to her husband, Juan. "I
think the house is on fire." And when Juan opened
their bedroom door, a wall of fire was on the other side,
raging through the hallway of their split-level home.
In the minutes that followed, the house in northern Georgia
burned to the ground, and four members of the Washington
family escaped with their lives.
But Blake Washington, the couple's 4-year-old daughter,
died in her bed in the blaze on New Year's Day 2004, the
victim of what baffled local investigators said was a fire
of undetermined origin. Nobody suspected that clues may
have existed in the smoldering remains of the family's
2001 Ford F-150 pickup until a federal investigation of
Ford vehicle fires became public earlier this year. With
millions of Ford pickups and SUVs now under scrutiny for
dangerous fires, the Washington case may prove to be a
tragic example of the consequences of a hidden automotive
defect.
On Friday, the Washington family filed a wrongful death
suit in a Georgia state court against Ford Motor Co., alleging
that a defective cruise-control deactivation switch in
the F-150 caused the fire that killed Blake.
"We expect to prove that the physical evidence is
consistent with the fire originating in the Ford," said Mark
Chalos of the law firm Lieff Cabraser Heimann & Bernstein
in Nashville, Tenn. For Blake Washington's parents, the
lawsuit is all about getting to the truth behind the tragedy
that changed their lives forever. "We lost a child
and nothing's going to bring her back, no amount of money," said
Tanika Washington. "I want somebody to give a damn
that we lost our baby."
To read the full article on the Detroit News website, click
here. |
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July 26, 2005 |
Click2Houston.com, "NHTSA
Requests More Documents In Ford Fire Investigation" |
The federal government is ordering the
Ford Motor Co. to hand over more information in the ongoing
probe into fires happening in certain trucks and sport
utility vehicles. The development comes as the Local
2 Troubleshooter investigation into the fires prompts
action from a member of Congress, the station reported
Friday.
"It's important that we get to the bottom of this," U.S.
Rep. Ted Poe said.
The Houston-area congressman is looking for answers. After
watching the Local 2 Troubleshooters investigations into
fires happening in Ford F-150s, Expeditions and Lincoln
Navigators across Houston and nationwide, Poe personally
called the Ford Motor Company. |
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June 27, 2005 |
CNN News, "Ford Document:
Millions of vehicles have fire risk part" |
Early this year, Laura Hernandez nudged
her husband, Nestor Oyola, as he slept in their Kissimmee
home and asked him to put the Ford Expedition he had
bought her the day before into the garage.
Oyola moved the Expedition and they went to sleep. At 5
the next morning, half an hour after her husband had driven
his SUV to work, Hernandez was awakened by barking from
Chakuil, their Chihuahua mix.
"He saved our lives," said Hernandez, who smelled
smoke and roused her 15-year-old daughter, Rotsenmary.
A fire investigator, hired by their auto insurance
company, said the blaze was caused by a cruise-control
deactivation switch in the SUV -- a type of switch that
Ford installed in millions of its vehicles from 1992 until
2003. |
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June 16, 2005 |
BizJournals.com, "Lawsuit
blames TI, Ford in woman's death" |
A lawsuit filed by the family of an
Iowa woman who died in a fire last month claims Ford
Motor Co. and Texas Instruments Inc. are guilty of negligence.
The lawsuit claims that the death of Darletta Mohlis,
who died from injuries from a fire in her home May 2,
was the result of the failure of a cruise control deactivation
switch inside her 1996 F-150 truck that was made by Texas
Instruments.
The suit, filed in a Harris County District Court, also
names Wilmington, Del.-based E.I. DuPont de Nemours and
Co., which made the Kapton and Teflon coatings used in
the switch.
According to the suit, Dallas-based TI and Ford were aware
of more than 200 previous incidents in which engine-compartment
fires resulted from speed control deactivation switch failures,
but limited a recall to certain model-year vehicles to
save money. |
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March
23, 2005 |
The Associated Press, "U.S.
Agency to Probe Ford Pickups, SUVs" |
Federal regulators said
Wednesday they are investigating more than 3.7 million
Ford Motor Co. pickups and sport utility vehicles because
of a defect in a cruise control switch that already has
led to a recall.
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration said
it would examine Ford F-150 pickups from the 1995-1999
and 2001-2002 model years, and Ford Expeditions and Lincoln
Navigators from the 1997-1999 and 2001-2002 model years.
Agency officials said they have received 218 complaints
of engine fires from the cruise control switch in those
models. No injuries or fatalities have been reported. |
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January
28, 2005 |
San Francisco Chronicle, "Ford
recalls nearly 800,000 pickups and SUVs because of
fire risk" |
Ford Motor Co. is recalling nearly 800,000
pickups and sport utility vehicles because the cruise
control switch could short circuit and cause a fire under
the hood, the automaker said. In an interview Friday
from Deltona, Fla., broadcast on NBC's "Today" show,
F-150 owner Bob Garcia described how flames engulfed
his truck at his home while the ignition was turned off.
The intense fire also damaged his garage.
"It caught on fire inside the garage all by
itself," Garcia said. "No key in it." During
the interview, NBC showed a videotape dated last month
that showed the damage from the blaze.
Ford will notify owners of the recall in February, and
dealers will deactivate the cruise control switch for free.
Once the company has an adequate supply of replacement
switches, it will send another letter notifying owners
that they can get their switches replaced. Ford said cruise
control will be disabled once the switch is deactivated. |
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