The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

U.S.: Mercedes owners’ recall notices too late

- By Tom Krisher

DETROIT — The U.S. government is investigat­ing Mercedes-Benz, alleging that the German automaker has been slow to mail safety recall notices and file required reports involving recalls of over 1.4 million vehicles.

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administra­tion said a review found that Mercedes’ U.S. unit exceeded time limits for mailing letters to owners. In documents posted on its website, the agency also said it has questions about the company’s process and cadence for making recall decisions and notifying the government about them.

After an annual audit of recall files, the agency said it sent a letter to Mercedes outlining a list of problems with 2017 recalls.

“This list included numerous recalls in which MBUSA failed to notify owners of vehicle recalls within the full 60 days the company has under federal regulation,” the letter said.

In addition, the agency found that numerous times, Mercedes left out informatio­n about the problem that caused the recall or details of its recall plans. Those details included the percentage of vehicles affected by the recall problem and informatio­n about when the recalls would start.

Mercedes reported the informatio­n long after recalls began, “thereby not completing its reporting responsibi­lities and preventing NHTSA from fully assessing the safety risk involved and frustratin­g the agency’s oversight responsibi­lities,” the letter said.

The company didn’t answer the agency’s request to identify the steps it would take to meet notificati­on requiremen­ts, the letter said.

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