Toyota Motor Corp. may be fined a second time for failing to alert federal regulators that gas pedals might stick and cause unintended acceleration, the U.S. auto-safety regulator said.
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration announced a record $16.4 million civil penalty against Toyota on April 5 for failing to disclose the defect. The agency told Toyota, the world's largest automaker, in a letter the same day that it may levy an additional fine on the same pedals.
Pedals supplied to Toyota by CTS Corp. of Elkhart, Ind., “had two separate defects that may require two separate remedies,” NHTSA said in the letter obtained Friday, which cited documents submitted by Toyota. A recall in January of 2.3 million vehicles involved pedals that were slow to return after being depressed as well as pedals on various vehicles that could become stuck.
Toyota, based in Toyota City, Japan, has recalled more than 8 million cars and trucks worldwide for two defects that may cause unintended acceleration and to adjust brakes. President Akio Toyoda has said the company his grandfather founded failed to share defect information adequately among regional units.
Martha Voss, a Washington-based spokeswoman for Toyota, didn't immediately respond to a telephone call seeking comment.
In the letter, NHTSA Chief Counsel O. Kevin Vincent said Toyota didn't meet with the regulator until Jan. 19, two days before beginning its U.S. recall of sticky pedals. Toyota knew about defects with sticky pedals in July 2006, according to a timeline dated March 24 that it submitted to NHTSA.
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http://www.autonews.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20100410/OEM/100419998/1143#ixzz0koEUhLzfThe saga continues drip, drip, and drip some more. Not that it matters here, Tina Fey parodies of Sarah Failing are much more important.