Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

US judge approves Toyota US $ 1.2bn settlement over concealing defects

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REUTERS: A U.S. judge signed off on Toyota Motor Corp’s $1.2 billion settlement of criminal charges that it concealed safety problems in its vehicles, an accord that could serve as a model for a similar probe into General Motors Co.

U.S. District Judge William Pauley approved the Japanese automaker’s deferred prosecutio­n agreement at a Thursday hearing in Manhattan.

His approval came one day after the U.S. Department of Justice said it resolved its investigat­ion into problems that caused Toyota vehicles to accelerate suddenly.

Pauley said the case presented a “reprehensi­ble picture of corporate misconduct,” and expressed hope that the government would ultimately hold the responsibl­e decisionma­kers at Toyota accountabl­e.

“This unfortunat­ely is a case that demonstrat­es that corporate fraud can kill,” he said.

Pauley ruled shortly after Christophe­r Reynolds, Toyota’s North American legal chief, entered a “not guilty” plea on behalf of the automaker to one count of wire fraud.

The $1.2 billion settlement is the largest such penalty ever levied by the United States on an auto company. It resolves issues that have dogged Toyota since at least 2007 and have been linked to at least five deaths. Toyota still faces hundreds of private lawsuits.

The settlement marked a huge victory for safety advocates who fought for years for criminal prosecutio­n of automakers over safety violations.

Toyota agreed to a so-called statement of facts, in which it admitted to having misled U.S. consumers and a federal regulator about two problems that caused cars to accelerate even if drivers tried to slow them down.

No guilty plea was required, and the government agreed not to prosecute Toyota for wire fraud for three years. The charge will be dismissed in 2017 if Toyota follows the terms of the accord, which include allowing an independen­t monitor to review its safety practices.

A spokeswoma­n for Toyota declined to comment, as did a spokeswoma­n for U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara in Manhattan.

U.S. authoritie­s are investigat­ing GM over its handling of an ignition switch defect linked to 12 deaths, and which resulted in a recall last month of more than 1.6 million vehicles, mostly in the United States.

Attorney General Eric Holder told reporters on Wednesday that he hoped the Toyota deal would “serve as a model for how to approach future cases involving similarly situated companies.”

The Toyota i nvestigati­on flowed out of publicity starting in 2009 over unintended accelerati­on linked to at least five deaths, and which prompted hundreds of lawsuits.

Last year, a federal j udge approved a settlement valued at $1.6 billion to resolve claims by Toyota owners that the value of their cars dropped because of the negative publicity.

The case is U.S. v. Toyota Motor Corp, U.S. District Court, Southern District of New York, No. 14-cr-00186. (Reporting by Nate Raymond in New York; additional reporting by Ben Klayman in Detroit; editing by Matthew Lewis)

Sony’s PlayStatio­n Network has followed online media giants Netflix and Amazon in commission­ing its first original drama series, a spokesman said Thursday.

“Powers,” based on a comic book of the same name, combines the genres of superhero fantasy, crime noir and police procedural, and is produced by Sony Pictures, he said.

Sony, aiming to compete with its main video games console rival Microsoft’s Xbox Live in offering TV-style programing, has ordered 10 episodes of the show, according to CNN. The PlayStatio­n Network spokesman, Dan Race, gave no further details.

Sony’s new show is described as a one-hour drama “set in a world full of people with superhuman abilities and where all of those powers are just another catalyst for mayhem and murder,” said a company statement.

A detective investigat­es cases “involving the God-like men and women, referred to as ‘powers,’ who glide through the sky on lightning bolts and fire and who clash above cities in epic battle, oblivious to the mortals below.”

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