Sen. Schumer to Toyota: Cooperate with Investigators of New York Prius Accident
Toyota says it will provide black box info in Harrison incident.
March 12, 2010— -- In a press conference held near the site of a possible "Runaway Toyota" crash, Sen. Chuck Schumer, D.-N.Y., today asked that Toyota cooperate fully with local investigators looking into the incident.
"It's time for Toyota to work in good faith with the Harrison Police Department and turn over the information that the investigators need to get to the bottom of this accident," Schumer said. In the Tuesday accident, a driver hit a stone wall with her 2005 Prius after what she described as unintended acceleration.
Schumer also claimed that until pressure from his own office, from acting Harrison police chief Capt. Anthony Marraccini, and from Rep. Nita Lowey, D.-N.Y., Toyota had refused to turn over relevant information from the crash. Initial press accounts said that Capt. Marraccini felt Toyota had refused to provide information from the car's Electronic Data Recorder, the "black box" that records electronic information about the operation of a vehicle prior to a crash.
Press accounts and congressional testimony have indicated that it is more difficult to get Event Data Recorder information from Toyota officials than from other car companies. A recent Associated Press report said that Toyota has refused to provide information to crash victims, and has sometimes settled lawsuits rather than provide information or released only partial information.
In a statement to ABC News, Toyota strongly denied that it is slow in providing information, and said it always cooperates with law enforcement. Toyota denied that it had refused at any point to provide the EDR data to the Harrison investigators, saying it has a policy of always sharing the information with NHTSA and law enforcement officials upon request.
"We will happily offer up the information to any law enforcement agency with jurisdiction," said Toyota spokesperson John Hanson.
In an interview with ABC News prior to the Schumer press conference, Marraccini said Toyota had agreed to provide the black box information.
According to Marraccini, after the Tuesday accident Toyota had asked him to release the vehicle to the company for inspection, but he had refused because the car was part of an ongoing investigation. He says he did not initially "receive an affirmative answer" from the company on reading the black box, but has now been told yes.
"They're willing to cooperate and offer whatever comfort level we need to protect the integrity of the investigation," Marraccini said.