Criminal
charges filed
against Toyota; $1.2 billion penalty
U.S. Department of Justice
March 19, 2014
Justice Department
Announces Criminal Charge Against Toyota Motor Corporation and
Deferred Prosecution Agreement with $1.2 Billion Financial Penalty…
Toyota Motor Corporation Admits to Misleading Consumers and U.S.
Regulator about Safety Issues Related to Unintended Acceleration in
Its Cars; Independent Monitor to be Appointed to Oversee Toyota’s
Public Statements and Reporting of Safety Issues
WASHINGTON—U.S. Attorney
General Eric Holder, U.S. Secretary of Transportation Anthony Foxx,
U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York Preet Bharara,
Inspector General of the U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT)
Calvin L. Scovel, III, National Highway Traffic Safety Administration
(NHTSA) Acting Administrator David Friedman, and Federal Bureau of
Investigation (FBI) Deputy Assistant Director Joe Campbell announced
a criminal wire fraud charge against Toyota Motor Corporation (Toyota
or the company), an automotive company headquartered in Toyota City,
Japan, that designs, manufactures, assembles, and sells Toyota and
Lexus brand vehicles. The charge is that Toyota defrauded consumers
in the fall of 2009 and early 2010 by issuing misleading statements
about safety issues in Toyota and Lexus vehicles.
Also today, the Department
of Justice announced a deferred prosecution agreement with Toyota
(the agreement) under which the company admits that it misled U.S.
consumers by concealing and making deceptive statements about two
safety issues affecting its vehicles, each of which caused a type of
unintended acceleration. The admissions are contained in a detailed
statement of facts attached to the agreement. The agreement, which is
subject to judicial review, requires Toyota to pay a $1.2 billion
financial penalty—the largest penalty of its kind ever imposed on
an automotive company—and imposes on Toyota an independent monitor
to review and assess policies, practices, and procedures relating to
Toyota’s safety-related public statements and reporting
obligations. Toyota agrees to pay the penalty under a Final Order of
Forfeiture in a parallel civil action also filed today in the
Southern District of New York.
The criminal charge is
contained in an information alleging one count of wire fraud. If
Toyota abides by all the terms of the agreement, the government will
defer prosecution on the information for three years and then seek to
dismiss the charge.
“Rather than promptly
disclosing and correcting safety issues about which they were aware,
Toyota made misleading public statements to consumers and gave
inaccurate facts to members of Congress,” said Attorney General
Eric Holder. “When car owners get behind the wheel, they have a
right to expect that their vehicle is safe. If any part of the
automobile turns out to have safety issues, the car company has a
duty to be upfront about them, to fix them quickly, and to
immediately tell the truth about the problem and its scope. Toyota
violated that basic compact. Other car companies should not repeat
Toyota’s mistake: a recall may damage a company’s reputation, but
deceiving your customers makes that damage far more lasting.”
“Safety is our top
priority,” said Transportation Secretary Anthony Foxx. “Throughout
this recall process, NHTSA investigators worked tirelessly to make
sure that Toyota recalled vehicles with defects causing unintended
acceleration and to determine when they learned of it, and, as we
learned today, they succeeded in this effort in spite of
extraordinary challenges. Today’s penalties follow NHTSA’s own
record civil penalties of more than $66 million—together, they send
a powerful message to all manufacturers to follow our recall
requirements or they will face serious consequences.”
“Toyota stands charged
with a criminal offense because it cared more about savings than
safety and more about its own brand and bottom line than the truth,”
said U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara for the Southern District of New
York. “In its zeal to stanch bad publicity in 2009 and 2010, Toyota
misled regulators, misled customers, and even misstated the facts to
Congress. The tens of millions of drivers in America have an absolute
right to expect that the companies manufacturing their cars are not
lying about serious safety issues; are not slow-walking safety fixes;
and are not playing games with their lives. Companies that make
inherently dangerous products must be maximally transparent, not
two-faced. That is why we have undertaken this landmark enforcement
action. And the entire auto industry should take notice.”
“To the families and
friends of those who died or were injured as a result of these
incidents, I offer my deepest sympathies for your loss and my highest
admiration for the strength you demonstrate every day,” said DOT
Inspector General Calvin L. Scovel, III. “As is true for Secretary
Foxx and DOT, safety is and will remain the highest priority of my
office. The OIG is committed to working with our law enforcement and
prosecutorial partners in pursuing those who commit criminal
violations of the Department of Transportation’s or related laws.
The efforts of this dedicated multi-agency team and the agreement
reached with Toyota must serve as a clarion call to all auto
manufacturers of the need to always be as vigilant and forthcoming as
possible to keep the public safe.”
According to the
allegations in the information, as well as other documents filed
today in Manhattan federal court, including the statement of facts:
In the fall of 2009, Toyota
deceived consumers and its U.S. regulator, the National Highway
Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA), by claiming that it had
“addressed” the “root cause” of unintended acceleration in
its vehicles through a limited safety recall of eight models for
floor mat entrapment, a dangerous condition in which an improperly
secured or incompatible all-weather floor mat can “trap” a
depressed gas pedal, causing the car to accelerate to a high speed.
Such public assurances deceived customers and NHTSA in two ways:
first, at the time the statements were made, Toyota knew that it had
not recalled some cars with design features that made them just as
susceptible to floor mat entrapment as some of the recalled cars.
Second, only weeks before these statements were made, Toyota had
taken steps to hide from NHTSA another type of unintended
acceleration in its vehicles, separate and apart from floor mat
entrapment: a problem with accelerators getting stuck at partially
depressed levels, known as “sticky pedal.”
Floor Mat Entrapment: A
Fatal Problem
Toyota issued its
misleading statements and undertook its acts of concealment against
the backdrop of intense public concern and scrutiny over the safety
of its vehicles following a widely publicized August 28, 2009
accident in San Diego, California, that killed a family of four. A
Lexus dealer had improperly installed an incompatible all-weather
floor mat into the Lexus ES350 in which the family was traveling, and
that mat entrapped the accelerator at full throttle. A 911 emergency
call made from the out-of-control vehicle, which was speeding at over
100 miles per hour, reported, “We’re in a Lexus...and we’re
going north on 125 and our accelerator is stuck...there’s no
brakes...we’re approaching the intersection.... Hold on...hold on
and pray...pray.” The call ended with the sound of the crash that
killed everyone in the vehicle.
The San Diego accident was
not the first time that Toyota had faced a problem with floor mat
entrapment. In 2007, following a series of reports alleging
unintended acceleration in Toyota and Lexus vehicles, NHTSA opened a
defect investigation into the Lexus ES350 model (the vehicle involved
in the 2009 San Diego accident) and identified several other Toyota
and Lexus models it believed might likewise be defective. Toyota,
while denying to NHTSA the need to recall any of its vehicles,
conducted an internal investigation in 2007 that revealed that
certain Toyota and Lexus models, including most of the ones that
NHTSA had identified as potentially problematic, had design features
rendering entrapment of the gas pedal by an all-weather floor mat
more likely. Toyota did not share these results with NHTSA. In the
end, the company negotiated a limited recall of 55,000 mats (no
vehicles)—a result that Toyota employees touted internally as a
major victory: “had the agency...pushed for recall of the throttle
pedal assembly (for instance), we would be looking at upwards of $100
million + in unnecessary costs.”
Shortly after Toyota
announced its 2007 mat recall, company engineers revised internal
design guidelines to provide for, among other things, a minimum
clearance of 10 millimeters between a fully depressed gas pedal and
the floor. But Toyota decided those revised guidelines would only
apply where a model was receiving a “full model redesign”—something
each Toyota and Lexus model underwent only about once every three to
five years. As a result, even after the revised guidelines had been
adopted internally, many new vehicles produced and sold by
Toyota—including the Lexus ES350 involved in the 2009 San Diego
accident—did not comply with Toyota’s 2007 guidelines.
After the fatal and highly
publicized San Diego accident, Toyota agreed to recall eight of its
models, including the ES350, for floor mat entrapment susceptibility.
Thereafter, as part of an effort to defend its brand image, Toyota
began issuing public statements assuring customers that this limited
recall had “addressed the root cause of unintended acceleration”
in its U.S.-sold vehicles.
As Toyota knew from
internal testing it had completed by the time these statements were
made, the eight-model recall had not in fact “addressed the root
cause” of even the floor mat entrapment problem. Models not
recalled—and therefore still on the road—bore design features
rendering them just as susceptible to floor mat entrapment as those
within the recall population. One engineer working at a Toyota
facility in California had concluded that the Corolla, a top-selling
car that had not been recalled, was among the three “worse”
vehicles for floor mat entrapment. In October 2009, Toyota engineers
in Japan circulated a chart showing that the Corolla had the lowest
rating for floor mat entrapment under their analysis. None of these
findings or this data were shared with NHTSA at the time.
The Sticky Pedal Problem
What is more misleading, at
the same time it was assuring the public that the “root cause” of
unintended acceleration had been “addressed” by the 2009
eight-model floor mat entrapment recall, Toyota was hiding from NHTSA
a second cause of unintended acceleration in its vehicles: the sticky
pedal. Sticky pedal, a phenomenon affecting pedals manufactured by a
U.S. company (“A-Pedal Company”) and installed in many Toyota
brand vehicles in North America as well as Europe, resulted from the
use of a plastic material inside the pedals that could cause the
accelerator pedal to become mechanically stuck in a partially
depressed position. The pedals incorporating this plastic were
installed in, among other models, the Camry, the Matrix, the Corolla,
and the Avalon sold in the United States.
The sticky pedal problem
surfaced in Europe in 2008. There, reports reflected instances of
“uncontrolled acceleration” and unintended acceleration to
“maximum RPM,” and customer concern that the condition was
“extremely dangerous.”
In early 2009, Toyota
circulated to European Toyota distributors information about the
sticky pedal problem and instructions for addressing the problem if
it presented itself in a customer’s vehicle. These instructions
identified the issue as “sudden RPM increase/vehicle acceleration
due to accelerator pedal sticking” and stated that should a
customer complain of pedal sticking, the pedal should be replaced
with pedals manufactured by a company other than A-Pedal Company.
Contemporaneous internal Toyota documents described the sticky pedal
problem as a “defect” that was “[i]mportant in terms of safety
because of the possibility of accidents.”
Toyota did not then inform
its U.S. regulators of the sticky pedal problem or conduct a recall.
Instead, beginning in the spring of 2009, Toyota quietly directed
A-Pedal Company to change the pedals in new productions of affected
models in Europe and to plan for the same design changes to be rolled
out in the United States (where the same problematic pedals were
being used) beginning in the fall of 2009. The design change was to
substitute the plastic used in the affected pedal models with another
material and to change the length of the friction lever in the pedal.
Meanwhile, the sticky pedal
problem was manifesting itself in U.S. vehicles. On or about the same
day the San Diego floor mat entrapment accident occurred, staff at a
U.S. Toyota subsidiary in California sent a memorandum to staff at
Toyota in Japan identifying as “critical” an “unintended
acceleration” issue separate and apart from floor mat entrapment
that had been identified in an accelerator pedal of a Toyota Matrix
vehicle in Arizona. The problem identified, and then reproduced
during testing of the pedal on September 17, 2009, was the sticky
pedal problem. Also in August, the sticky pedal problem cropped up in
a U.S. Camry.
On September 9, 2009, an
employee of a U.S. Toyota subsidiary who was concerned about the
sticky pedal problem in the United States and believed that Toyota
should address the problem prepared a “Market Impact Summary”
listing (in addition to the August 2009 Matrix and Camry) 39 warranty
cases that he believed involved potential manifestations of the
sticky pedal problem. This document, which was circulated to Toyota
engineers and, later, to staff in charge of recall decisions in
Japan, designated the sticky pedal problem as priority level “A,”
the highest level.
By no later than September
2009, Toyota recognized internally that the sticky pedal problem
posed a risk of a type of unintended acceleration—or “overrun,”
as Toyota sometimes called it—in many of its U.S. vehicles. A
September 2009 presentation made by a manager at a U.S. Toyota
subsidiary to Toyota executives gave a “current summary of O/R
[overrun] types in NA [North American] market” that listed the
three confirmed types as “mat interference” (i.e., floor mat
entrapment), “material issue” (described as “pedal stuck
and...pedal slow return/deformed”) and “simultaneous pedal press”
by the consumer. The presentation further listed the models affected
by the “material issue” as including “Camry, Corolla, Matrix,
Avalon.”
Hiding Sticky Pedal from
NHTSA and the Public
As noted, Toyota had by
this time developed internal plans to implement design changes for
all A-Pedal-Company-manufactured pedals in U.S. Toyota models to
address, on a going-forward basis, the still-undisclosed sticky pedal
problem that had already been resolved for new vehicles in Europe. On
October 5, 2009, Toyota engineers issued to A-Pedal Company the first
of the design change instructions intended to prevent sticky pedal in
the U.S. market. This was described internally as an “urgent”
measure to be implemented on an “express” basis, as a “major”
change—meaning that the part number of the subject pedal was to
change and that all inventory units with the old pedal number should
be scrapped.
On October 21, 2009,
however, in the wake of the San Diego floor mat entrapment accident
and in the midst of Toyota’s discussions with NHTSA about its
eight-model entrapment recall, engineers at Toyota and the leadership
of Toyota’s recall decision group decided to cancel the design
change instruction that had already been issued and to suspend all
remaining design changes planned for A-Pedal Company pedals in U.S.
models. U.S. Toyota subsidiary employees who had been preparing for
implementation of the changes were instructed, orally, to alert the
manufacturing plants of the cancellation. They were also instructed
not to put anything about the cancellation in writing. A-Pedal
Company itself would receive no written cancellation at this time;
instead, contrary to Toyota’s own standard procedures, the
cancellation was to be effected without a paper trail.
Toyota decided to suspend
the pedal design changes in the United States and to avoid
memorializing that suspension in order to prevent NHTSA from learning
about the sticky pedal problem.
In early November 2009,
Toyota and the leadership of a U.S. Toyota subsidiary became aware of
three instances of sticky pedal in U.S. Corollas. Shortly thereafter,
the leadership of the recall decision group within Toyota discussed a
plan to finally disclose the sticky pedal problem to NHTSA. The
recall decision group was aware at this time not only of the problems
in the three Corollas in the United States but also of the problems
that had surfaced in a Matrix and a Camry in August 2009 and been
reproduced through testing in September 2009. The group was also
familiar with the sticky pedal problem in Europe, the design changes
that had been implemented there, and the cancellation and suspension
of similar planned design changes in the United States. Knowing all
this, the group’s leadership decided that (a) it would not disclose
the September 2009 Market Impact Summary to NHTSA; (b) if any
disclosure were to be made to NHTSA, it would be limited to a
disclosure that there were some reports of unintended acceleration
apparently unrelated to floor mat entrapment; and (c) NHTSA should be
told that Toyota had made no findings with respect to the sticky
pedal problem reflected in the reports concerning the three U.S.
Corollas and that the investigation of the problem had just begun.
On November 17, 2009,
before Toyota had negotiated with NHTSA a final set of remedies for
the eight models encompassed by the floor mat entrapment recall,
Toyota informed NHTSA of the three Corolla reports and several other
reports of unintended acceleration in Toyota model vehicles equipped
with pedals manufactured by A Pedal
Company. In Toyota’s disclosure to NHTSA, Toyota did not reveal its
understanding of the sticky pedal problem as a type of unintended
acceleration, nor did it reveal the problem’s manifestation and the
subsequent design changes in Europe; the planned, cancelled, and
suspended design changes in the United States; the August 2009 Camry
and Matrix vehicles that had suffered sticky pedal; or the September
2009 Market Impact Summary.
Toyota’s Misleading
Statements
After the August 2009 fatal
floor mat entrapment accident in San Diego, several articles critical
of Toyota appeared in U.S. newspapers. The articles reported
instances of Toyota customers allegedly experiencing unintended
acceleration and the authors accused Toyota of, among other things,
hiding defects related to unintended acceleration.
On November 25, 2009,
Toyota, through a U.S. subsidiary, announced its floor mat entrapment
resolution with NHTSA. In a press release that had been approved by
Toyota, the U.S. subsidiary assured customers: “The safety of our
owners and the public is our utmost concern, and Toyota has and will
continue to thoroughly investigate and take appropriate measures to
address any defect trends that are identified.” A spokesperson for
the subsidiary stated during a press conference the same day, “We’re
very, very confident that we have addressed this issue.”
In truth, the issue of
unintended acceleration had not been “addressed” by the remedies
announced. A-Pedal Company pedals that could experience stickiness
were still on the road and still, in fact, being installed in
newly-produced vehicles. And the best-selling Corolla, the
Highlander, and the Venza—which had design features similar to
models that had been included in the earlier floor mat entrapment
recall—were not being “addressed” at all.
Again, on December 23,
2009, Toyota responded to media accusations that it was continuing to
hide defects in its vehicles by authorizing a U.S. Toyota subsidiary
to publish the following misleading statements on the subsidiary’s
website: “Toyota has absolutely not minimized public awareness of
any defect or issue with respect to its vehicles. Any suggestion to
the contrary is wrong and borders on irresponsibility. We are
confident that the measures we are taking address the root cause and
will reduce the risk of pedal entrapment.” In fact, Toyota had
“minimized public awareness of” both sticky pedal and floor mat
entrapment. Further, the measures Toyota had taken did not “address
the root cause” of unintended acceleration, because Toyota had not
yet issued a sticky pedal recall and had not yet recalled the
Corolla, the Venza, or the Highlander for floor mat entrapment.
Toyota’s False Timeline
When, in early 2010, Toyota
finally conducted safety recalls to address the unintended
acceleration issues it had concealed throughout the fall of 2009,
Toyota provided to the American public, NHTSA, and the United States
Congress an inaccurate timeline of events that made it appear as if
Toyota had learned of the sticky pedal in the United States in
October 2009 and then acted promptly to remedy the problem within 90
days of discovering it. In fact, Toyota had begun its investigation
of sticky pedal in the United States no later than August 2009, had
already reproduced the problem in a U.S. pedal by no later than
September 2009, and had taken active steps in the months following
that testing to hide the problem from NHTSA and the public.
This case is being handled
by the Office’s Securities and Commodities Fraud Task Force.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Bonnie Jonas, Deputy Chief of the Criminal
Division and Assistant U.S. Attorney Sarah E. McCallum are in charge
of the prosecution, and Assistant U.S. Attorney Sharon Cohen Levin,
Chief of the Money Laundering and Asset Forfeiture Unit, is
responsible for the forfeiture aspects of the case.
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