According to news sources, a California federal judge has tentatively allowed the first of many lawsuits put forth against Toyota over allegations of faulty acceleration problems in their vehicles. U.S District Judge James Selna has reportedly claimed that he was considering rejecting a motion by the carmaker to toss a suit that involved a Utah car crash that resulted in the death of two people. The car company was forced to enforce a worldwide recall of more than 14 million (read more)
Read MoreNASA Finds No Problems With Toyota Electronics
The United States Department of Transportation has announced that electronic defects did not result in unintended acceleration reports in Toyota cars.
Read MoreToyota Cases Not Heard Until 2013
The class action lawsuit against Toyota will be delayed from going to trail until 2013, says the judge hearing the cases.
Read MoreAuto Insurance Companies Sue Toyota
Auto insurance companies claim that funds they paid to Toyota car owners, which attributed to unintended acceleration, should be paid back.
Read MoreLawyers suing Toyota Motor Corp. are now focusing their cases on the claim that Toyota resisted installing a brake override system.
Read MoreReports Show Sharp Rise in Car Complaints
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration calculated over 40,000 vehicle complaints through Dec. 14, four times the amount of complaints in previous years.
Read MoreToyota Compensates Families of Crash Victims
Toyota is compensating the family of victims who died after their Toyota Lexus accelerator pedal stuck.
Read MoreToyota’s Long Road to Recovery
Toyota is recovering from millions of recalls by putting stricter safety standards in place, as well as hiring more diverse board members.
Read MoreJailed Man Seeks Retribution for Toyota Crash
Koua Lee was jailed after a car accident which killed 3 people, but he claims in a lawsuit against Toyota the car should be blamed for causing the accident.
Read MoreToyota is asking that a class action lawsuit be thrown out which claims many drivers experienced unintended acceleration.
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