Local police agency suggests that Hyundai accelerated on its own before fatal crash
Hyundai says runaway vehicle complaints are simply "pedal misapplication"
07/14/2017By Amy Martyn
Police investigating a fatal car crash between a Hyundai and a semi-trailer truck in Pennsylvania are reportedly looking into the possibility that the Hyundai accelerated on its own.
Victims Oscar Johnson, Willie Byrd, and Charles Barnes were traveling in Johnson’s 2009 Hyundai Santa Fe in Erie on July 7. Witnesses told police that the car was speeding and swerving through traffic. Surveillance footage, according to the police, shows the Santa Fe swerving to avoid two vehicles before running a red light and crashing into a semi-trailer.
The driver of the trailer truck was not harmed. But Johnson and Barnes, who were both 65, and Byrd, 72, all died at the scene. The men reportedly knew each other through a local church.
Medical or mechanical issue examined
Erie Police Department Chief Donald Dacus told the Erie Times-News on Monday that investigators believe the accident was either caused by a medical episode or a mechanical problem in the Santa Fe. In an interview with the newspaper, Dacus referenced “numerous consumer reports nationwide” that descibe an “accelerator that sticks.”
An interview that another investigator gave the local paper on Wednesday was even more assertive in pinning blame on the Hyundai. Sgt. Jeff Annunziata told the paper that he believed the crash was caused by a “mechanical” issue within the vehicle. The person driving the Hyundai -- police have not yet said who was actually driving Johnson's car, as two of the victims' bodies were ejected from the vehicle on impact -- acted heroically by swerving to avoid two cars, the sergeant said.
“He really did a heroic thing doing what he did,” the sergeant told the paper. The police department has not yet announced its final, official determination.
Hyundais have been investigated in Asia
The little-understood phenomenon of a car accelerating on its own while the brakes fail is often referred to as sudden unintended acceleration. Numerous vehicle makes and models, including Hyundais, are suspected of having the defect.
Government agencies in both Singapore and South Korea have investigated possible sudden unintended acceleration in Hyundai vehicles, but the government agencies in both countries ruled in favor of the carmaker. South Korea and Singapore officials said that the drivers were at fault for confusing their gas pedal with the brake.
Still, those rulings vindicating Hyundai did not quash concerns about runaway Hyundais abroad. In August 2016, black box footage that appeared to show a Hyundai speeding on its own as its panicked driver swerved to avoid people was published to YouTube. Three passengers died in that crash.
Hyundai’s spokespeople have maintained in interviews with ConsumerAffairs that “pedal misapplication” on the part of confused drivers is what actually causes the crashes.
The company's press team has not yet made a statement about the crash in Erie.
Friends recall warnings from victim
Consumers in the United States can submit complaints about their cars to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration website. A search of “Hyundai” and “unintended acceleration” in the agency’s public database turns up more than three dozen reports.
The 2009 Hyundai Santa Fe specifically has six public complaints about occasions when the car “suddenly accelerated.”
“ON MARCH 24, 2010, MY CO-WORKER AND I WERE IN MY 2009 HYUNDAI SANTA FE WHEN IT SUDDENLY ACCELERATED,” reads one of those complaints. “I PUSHED THE BRAKE TO THE FLOOR AND IT WOULD NOT SLOW DOWN. I THEN PUT ON THE EMERGENCY BRAKE. BOTH FEET WERE EXTENDED TO THE FLOOR HOLDING THESE BRAKES DOWN.
“THE CAR DID SLOW DOWN BUT WOULD NOT STOP. I HAD TO TAKE A LEFT TURN ACROSS THE HIGHWAY (THERE WAS FORTUNATELY A BREAK IN THE TRAFFIC), I PUT THE CAR IN PARK AND TURNED OFF THE ENGINE. IT MADE A VERY LOUD NOISE THAT LASTED ABOUT 10 SECONDS OR SO. WE JUMPED OUT OF THE CAR AS IF IT WERE ON FIRE. IT'S CURRENTLY AT THE SHEEHY DEALERSHIP IN WALDORF, MD. WE ARE AWAITING THEIR DIAGNOSIS.”
Johnson had also complained about acceleration problems in his own 2009 Hyundai Santa Fe, the local newspaper reported. Friends of Johnson’s told the Erie Times-News that Johnson had purchased the car only five days prior to the crash, and complained about an unspecified problem with the accelerator during that period.
https://www.consumeraffairs.com/news/local-police-agency-suggests-that-hyundai-accelerated-on-its-own-before-fatal-crash-071417.html