The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Kia, Hyundai OK $200M car-theft flaw settlement

- By Michael E. Kanell michael.kanell@ajc.com

Kia and Hyundai have agreed to a settlement potentiall­y worth $200 million in a suit accusing them of making millions of vehicles that were easy prey to thieves because they lacked protection­s that were commonly included by other manufactur­ers.

Owners of about 9 million vehicles are affected by the class-action suit.

“Our goal in finalizing this settlement was to leave no one in the dark,” said Steve Berman, managing partner at the Seattle-based law firm of Hagens Berman, one of several representi­ng the class of vehicle owners, in a statement. “The owners of these cars have experience­d enough upset, and we worked to achieve a settlement that covers many types of losses.”

First priority, he said, will be getting payments to owners who sustained “out-ofpocket” losses due to theft of vehicles that were designed without “immobilize­rs,” an anti-theft device meant to keep a vehicle from being started without a code from the vehicle’s key.

The Highway Loss Data Institute found that in 2015, 26% of Hyundai and Kia vehicles had immobilize­rs as standard equipment, compared with 96% of other manufactur­ers’ vehicles, according to The New York Times.

The settlement also includes those who owned “theftprone” vehicles that were not stolen, Berman said.

The vehicles, made between 2011 and 2022, also had other design flaws, like steering columns that allowed easy access to the ignition assembly, he said. The ignition cylinders were built without a locking mechanism, making them easily removed by thieves.

In a 21st-century twist, the design flaws were given mass exposure in videos on Tiktok and Youtube, including a “Kia Challenge,” in which online users posted guides to stealing the vehicles.

Class-action lawyers said they would have settlement websites for affected owners.

The agreement is subject to approval by a federal judge. The companies said in a statement that the total amount of the payout depends on how many customers participat­e. They said they would set aside up to $145 million to cover those out-of-pocket losses by customers.

Kia operates separately from Hyundai but is a subsidiary of the Korean-based automaker. The Kia factory in West Point, which produces about 340,000 vehicles a year, is the only Kia manufactur­ing plant in the United States. Hyundais are manufactur­ed in Montgomery, Alabama.

However, some vehicles are imported from elsewhere. The Atlanta Journal-constituti­on asked how many of the vehicles covered by the lawsuit came off the Georgia assembly line, but Kia on Monday was unable to say specifical­ly.

The settlement will include software upgrades for some models, including the Kia Sportage, Kia Sorento and the Kia Sedona, according to The New York Times.

Georgia ranks 10th in the nation for vehicle thefts, according to an analysis by Valuepengu­in, a subsidiary of Lending Tree, which analyzed statistics compiled by the National Insurance Crime Bureau.

In Georgia, the vehicle most commonly stolen has been a Ford pickup truck, the analysis showed.

The computer-based systems that are used in current vehicles means that most thieves, too, are becoming more sophistica­ted, according to Bankrate.

 ?? DAVID ZALUBOWSKI/AP FILE ?? Santa Fe SUVS sit outside a Hyundai dealership. Hyundai Motor America and Kia America have resolved with a settlement agreement a class-action lawsuit prompted by a surge in vehicle thefts.
DAVID ZALUBOWSKI/AP FILE Santa Fe SUVS sit outside a Hyundai dealership. Hyundai Motor America and Kia America have resolved with a settlement agreement a class-action lawsuit prompted by a surge in vehicle thefts.

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