Waxman Slams Toyota's Claim of Research Into Sudden Acceleration

In Congressional hearing, Waxman casts doubts on Toyota's research.

ByABC News
May 19, 2010, 4:33 PM

May 20, 2010 — -- On Capitol Hill Thursday morning, House Commerce Committee chairman Rep. Henry Waxman, D.-Calif., said he was "baffled" by assurances from Toyota that electronics were not the cause of sudden acceleration in some Toyota vehicles.

"There is no evidence," said Waxman during opening remarks at a committee hearing, "that Toyota has conducted extensive or rigorous testing of its vehicles for potential electronic defects that could cause sudden unintended acceleration."

Waxman said that the committee's investigation since its last hearing on Toyota in February had revealed two flaws with the research conducted by the carmaker and the engineering firm it had hired. According to Waxman, research conducted by company engineers in Japan was performed on prototype vehicles, not cars manufactured for the market, and research done by Exponent, Toyota's engineering firm, was conducted in response to lawsuits, and did not include a comprehensive look into potential causes of unintended acceleration.

Rep. Bart Stupak, D.-Mich, chair of the committee's Subcommittee on Oversight, echoed Rep. Waxman's claim that Toyota had not conducted extensive testing, and also charged that the automaker had emphasized damage control instead of scientific research.

"What's disappointing to me," said Stupak, "is learning that Toyota seems to have focused more on discrediting its critics than on solving the problem." Stupak cited a poll conducted by Toyota, and a press conference held by Toyota to discredit the work of Dr. Dave Gilbert, a committee witness. When Dr. Gilbert testifed before the committee in February, he explained that he had found a way to induce an electrical short and cause sudden unintended acceleration in a Toyota vehicle without triggering an error code in the vehicle's computer.

"The Exponent report on Dr. Gilbert's research was a hit job, not solid science," said Stupak. "Independent experts have defended Dr. Gilbert's approach."

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National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) chief David Strickland told the committee that Gilbert will travel to a government test facility in Ohio within the next two weeks to go over his findings with NHTSA and NASA engineers. "We have to take his work very seriously," said Strickland. Strickland also criticized Toyota's arrangement with Exponent, saying "all the work has been in preparation for litigation, but it is not a scientific analysis." Strickland added that Toyota's pre-market testing of its electronic throttle control was not enough to prove the system was fool-proof in real world conditions. "I don't think that NHTSA would say that a pre-market test validates a long-term answer of impossibility of there being a failure," said Strickland.