GM Car Ignition

Posted by Hijab Sheikh.

A long case of a Louisiana man and woman’s car accident in 2014 ended on Tuesday, March 29, 2016. The jury in Manhattan listened to them for more than two hours, blaming their accident over a defective ignition switch while the GM lawyer said there was no evidence that there was a flaw in the ignition switch.

Since 2014, there were more 30 million GM automaker recalls. There were hundreds of claims made against GM automaker. “Under certain conditions, the ignition switch can slip out of the on position, making it difficult to steer or stop as the car stalls” (Niemeiser). GM says that they fixed this issue. But if that’s the case, then why have there been so many recalls? Instead of acknowledging the fact that there was a flaw in the ignition switch, GM blamed the accident on “a key chain pulled down by the weight of other keys might have pulled it out of position” (Nieumeiser).

Randall Jackson, Plaintiff’s attorney, said the GM lawyer’s statement doesn’t make sense. GM attorney Mike Brock blamed the accident on ice and claimed that there wasn’t any major damages to the vehicle or the passengers; there were minor scrapes on the bumper, but that is about it.

GM announced the following statistics, settling “1,385 death and injury cases for $275 million and a class-action shareholders’ lawsuit for $300 million. The company paid nearly $600 million to settle 399 claims made to a fund it established. Those claims covered 124 deaths and 275 injuries.” (Nieumeiser).

GM rejected 90 perecent of the claims that were made, out of the 4,343 they received.

Bibliography

Neumeiser, Larry. “FindLaw | Legal News & Information.” Lawyers Clash over Ignition Switch Claims in 2nd GM Case. Find Law, 29 Mar. 2016. Web. 31 Mar. 2016.

Hijab is a public health major at Montclair State University, Class of 2017.