The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Takata pleads guilty in air bag scandal

Company agrees to pay $1 billion in penalties for concealing deadly defect

- By Tom Krisher and Ed White

Japanese auto parts maker Takata Corp. pleaded guilty to fraud Monday and agreed to pay $1 billion in penalties for concealing an air bag defect blamed for at least 16 deaths, most of them in the U.S.

The scandal, meanwhile, seemed to grow wider when plaintiffs’ attorneys charged that five major automakers knew the devices were dangerous but continued to use them for years to save money.

In pleading guilty, Takata admitted hiding evidence that millions of its air bag inflators can explode with too much force, hurling lethal shrapnel into drivers and passengers.

The inflators are blamed for 11 deaths in the U.S. alone and more than 180 injuries worldwide. The problem touched off the biggest recall in U.S. automotive history, involving 42 million vehicles and up to 69 million inflators.

The company’s chief financial officer, Yoichiro Nomura, entered the guilty plea on Takata’s behalf in federal court in Detroit. He also agreed that Takata will be sold or merge with another company.

The penalties include $850 million in restitutio­n to automakers, $125 million for victims and families and a $25 million criminal fine.

Separately, three former executives are charged with falsifying test reports. They remain in Japan.

Takata’s inflators use ammonium nitrate to create a small explosion that inflates air bags in a crash. But when exposed to prolonged high temperatur­es and humidity, the chemical can deteriorat­e and burn too fast. That can blow apart a metal canister.

In the U.S., 19 automakers are recalling the inflators. World-

wide, the total number of inflators being recalled is over 100 million.

Takata’s penalty is small compared with the one imposed on Volkswagen, which must buy back cars and pay up to $21 billion in penalties and compensati­on to owners over its emissions-cheating scandal.

Karl Brauer, executive publisher of Kelley Blue Book, said authoritie­s may have kept the penalty manageable so Takata could stay in business and continue

to carry out the giant recall.

“My sense is there has been more kid-gloves treatment of Tataka simply because destroying them makes the problem much worse,” Brauer said.

Takata, which also makes seatbelts, has racked up two straight years of losses over the recalls but said it hopes to start turning a profit again this fiscal year.

Meanwhile, plaintiffs in dozens of lawsuits over the defect charged in court papers filed Monday in Miami that Honda, Toyota, Nissan, Ford and BMW had independen­t knowledge that Takata’s air bags were unsafe

before putting them in millions of vehicles.

After an inflator ruptured in 2009, one of the auto companies described the problem as “one in which a passenger protection device was transforme­d into a killing weapon,” the court filing said. The company was not identified in the document.

The filing marks the broadest allegation yet that automakers knowingly put their customers in danger.

“The automotive defendants were aware that rupture after rupture, both during testing and in the field, confirmed how dangerous and defective Takata’s air

bags were,” the plaintiffs’ attorneys said.

The auto companies have asserted that they were deceived by Takata and shouldn’t be held liable.

In fact, in Takata’s plea agreement, the Justice Department says Takata got the car companies to keep buying its inflators “through submission of false and fraudulent reports and other informatio­n that concealed the true and accurate test results.”

The plaintiffs are suing not only over the deaths and injuries but over what they say is the vehicles’ loss in value because of the defect.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Visitors walk by a Takata Corp. desk at an automaker’s showroom in Tokyo. Japanese auto parts maker Takata Corp. pleaded guilty to fraud Monday and agreed to pay $1 billion in penalties for concealing an air bag defect blamed for at least 16 deaths,...
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Visitors walk by a Takata Corp. desk at an automaker’s showroom in Tokyo. Japanese auto parts maker Takata Corp. pleaded guilty to fraud Monday and agreed to pay $1 billion in penalties for concealing an air bag defect blamed for at least 16 deaths,...

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