Sitemap | Search         

 
 
  
 

Image: Submit your case

SUBMIT YOUR CASE

Lieff Cabraser represents people injured in car, SUV and other vehicle accidents. Click here to submit your case.



 
 

April 13, 2008

New York Times, "Huge Recall, but Many Cars Unfixed"

A faulty Ford cruise control switch has been blamed for 1,500 fires. In Lithonia, Ga., a neighbor photographed a Ford F-150 going up in flames along with a nearby garage.

Image: Ford vehicles on fire

[Photographs courtesy of Lieff, Cabraser, Heimann & Bernstein, LLP]

AFTER six recalls to correct problems with millions of Ford Motor Company cruise-control switches blamed for almost 1,500 fires, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration took an unusual step. In February, it issued a consumer advisory urging owners whose vehicles had not yet been fixed to have the switches disconnected immediately.

"Vehicles are continuing to catch fire and buildings are continuing to catch fire because the remedy hasn't been effected yet," Rae Tyson, a spokesman for the safety agency, said. "This is a defect that could possibly have dire consequences, and we wanted to do what we could to try to make people more aware of the need to get vehicles back to the dealer quickly -- if not for the permanent remedy, at least for a short-term remedy."

The recalls -- which included what the government called a recall of a recall -- began in 1999. They covered some 10 million Ford, Lincoln and Mercury vehicles from 1992-2004, a record number recalled for a single problem.

Ford had already set the record for the largest recall, which also involved a potential fire hazard. That was for 7.9 million vehicles with ignition switch problems. The agency's February advisory concerned a cruise-control deactivation switch that could develop a short circuit. Regulators say that could cause a vehicle to catch fire even while it is parked and the ignition is off. The switch's function is to cut off the cruise control when the driver taps the brakes.

The safety administration says it can connect 65 fires to switch failures, but the problem could be far greater: the agency received 1,472 complaints or allegations of engine compartment fires related to the switches before the investigation was closed in August 2006. Because investigators were often unable to contact owners, not enough data could be collected to make a final determination on many complaints. The agency also received 60 more fire complaints since the inquiry ended. The agency has not linked switch failures to any deaths, but at least three wrongful death suits have been filed against Ford.

Learn more about Ford vehicle fires and the rights of people injured by car, SUV, van and truck fires.

Images: newspaper
 

DEFECTIVE VEHICLES - PERSONAL INJURY ATTORNEYS

We are committed to providing the very best representation and support possible for our vehicle injury clients, and to obtaining the highest compensation available under law for their claims.

Contact an attorney at Lieff Cabraser to discuss your legal rights at no cost or obligation.

 

OUR PROMISE TO YOU

  • Our lawyers have years of experience successfully representing clients in personal injury cases.
  • There is no charge or obligation for our review of your case.
  • In death and serious injury cases, we are pleased to visit you where you live, at no cost, to discuss your legal rights and answer your questions.
  • We have retained automotive safety and medical experts nationwide to assist our clients with their claims.
 
 
About Lieff Cabraser

Lieff Cabraser Heimann & Bernstein, LLP, is a national law firm of over 50 lawyers with offices in San Francisco, New York and Nashville. Our attorneys are recognized for the successful prosecution of lawsuits involving deaths, personal injuries and property damage due to defective products, including dangerous and defective vehicles.

In 2007, in Mraz v. DaimlerChrysler, Lieff Cabraser attorneys, with local co-counsel, obtained the fourth-largest verdict in California for the year. At trial, plaintiffs showed that a defective transmission was responsible for making a Dodge Dakota pickup shift into reverse and run over Richard Mraz.

Currently, we are prosecuting personal injury and wrongful death lawsuits involving cars, vans, pickup trucks, SUVs, the Yamaha Rhino atv and other vehicles. To learn more about the firm, click here.

 
graphic: bottom boundary graphic: shadow
graphic: bottom shadow graphic: corner shadow

Attorney Advertising Disclaimer | Privacy Statement | Offices | Lieff Cabraser Network

Copyright © 2008 Lieff Cabraser Heimann & Bernstein, LLP

 
Link to Home page