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Tokyo (AP) - Toyota has received a subpoena from a U.S. federal
grand jury for documents related to the unintended acceleration of
its vehicles and problems in the braking system of its Prius
hybrid, the company said Monday, adding that it intends to comply
with the request.
The news came ahead of several meetings this week in Washington
on Toyota's massive recalls. Two House committees are holding
hearings this week on the Japanese automaker's recall of 8.5
million vehicles in recent months to deal with safety problems
involving gas pedals, floor mats and brakes.
The Japanese automaker also said Monday that it had received a
request for documents related to its disclosure policies and
unintended acceleration from the Securities and Exchange
Commission. The requests came from the Southern District of New
York on Feb. 8.
Toyota has already handed over other documents to congressional
investigators, some of which claimed that it saved money by
obtaining a limited recall from regulators in 2007. They could
create an even bigger challenge for Toyota President Akio Toyoda,
who is scheduled to testify at a House Energy and Commerce
Committee hearing on Tuesday.
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Toyota, in an internal presentation in July 2009 at its
Washington office, said it saved $100 million or more by
negotiating an "equipment recall" of floor mats involving 55,000
Toyota Camry and Lexus ES350 vehicles in September 2007.
The savings are listed under the title, "Wins for Toyota -
Safety Group." The document cites millions of dollars in other
savings by delaying safety regulations, avoiding defect
investigations and slowing down other industry requirements.
The documents could set off alarms in Congress over whether
Toyota put profits ahead of customer safety and pushed regulators
to narrow the scope of recalls.
"You can feel that the staff were thinking more about company
profits than customers," Mamoru Kato, an analyst at Tokai-Tokyo
Securities, said in an e-mail after viewing the documents. "It's
unfavorable for Toyota ahead of the hearings."
The documents were turned over to the House Oversight and
Government Reform Committee - which is scheduled to hold a hearing
Wednesday - and obtained by The Associated Press on Sunday. The
presentation was first reported by The Detroit News.
The world's largest automaker has been criticized for responding
too slowly to complaints of sudden acceleration in its vehicles
that are threatening to undermine its reputation for quality and
safety.
"This is any executive's worst nightmare - a damning document
comes out and exposes your company as having basically gone slow
and tried to delay addressing significant safety problems with
their product," said Jeff Kingston, director of Asian studies at
Temple University Japan, referring to the documents that claimed
the company saved millions in the 2007 recall.
Toyota said in a statement: "Our first priority is the safety
of our customers and to conclude otherwise on the basis of one
internal presentation is wrong. Our values have always been to put
the customer first and ensure the highest levels of safety and
quality."
Transportation Department spokeswoman Olivia Alair called the
document "very telling. And that's why Secretary (Ray) LaHood has
been saying we're going to hold Toyota's feet to the fire and make
sure they do what's necessary to make their cars safe for the
driving public."
The documents show the financial benefit of delay. In the
presentation, Toyota said a phase-in to new safety regulations for
side air bags saved the company $124 million and 50,000 man hours.
Delaying a rule for tougher door locks saved $11 million.
In one passage, the document says Toyota "negotiated
'equipment' recall on Camry/ES re SA; saved $100M+, w/ no defect
found."
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration had launched
an investigation in March 2007 over allegations that floor mats
were interfering with accelerator pedals. Toyota told the
government a month later that there was "no possibility of the
pedal interference with the all-weather floor mat if it's placed
properly and secured."
By that August, the government had connected the problem to a
dozen deaths and a survey of 600 Lexus owners discovered 10 percent
reported sudden or unexpected acceleration. But the recall in
September 2007 was limited to 55,000 Camry and ES350 vehicles to
replace the floor mats.
The 10-page internal presentation was dated July 6, 2009, less
than two months before a high-speed crash near San Diego killed a
California highway patrol officer and his family and reignited
concerns over sudden acceleration in Toyotas.
In October 2009, Toyota issued its largest-ever U.S. recall,
involving about 4 million vehicles, over concerns of pedals getting
stuck in floor mats.
The documents also show a company expecting tougher regulation
under the Obama administration.
Toyota highlighted some challenges it faces, including an
"activist administration & Congress - increasing laws &
regulation," "massive government support for Detroit automakers"
along with "continuing economic difficulty."
Under a heading titled "key safety issues," Toyota called the
Transportation Department and NHTSA under Obama "not
industry-friendly" and said the auto industry expected "a more
challenging regulatory and enforcement environment."
The presentation lists Yoshi Inaba, Toyota's chief executive in
North America, on its cover. Inaba is scheduled to testify before
the House Energy and Commerce Committee on Tuesday, along with
Toyoda and Jim Lentz, president of Toyota Motor Sales USA. The
committee is also expected to hear from LaHood, NHTSA Administrator
David Strickland and safety advocates.
The Oversight Committee is holding a hearing Wednesday with
Lentz, LaHood and Strickland. A Senate committee is planning a
March 2 hearing.
Toyoda arrived in the United States on Saturday and appeared to
be preparing for the hearing, the Yomiuri newspaper, Japan's
largest, reported Monday.
Toshiro Yoshinaga, an analyst at Aizawa Securities in Tokyo,
said that Toyota's actions as seen in the documents shows the
company believed the problems with its vehicles were unlikely to
become a major issue and illustrate the company's weakness in
crisis management.
"Toyota's perception was extremely optimistic," he said.
"It's sense of crisis has been lacking."
Temple Universty's Kingston said Toyoda must make clear that the
company has learned a lesson from growing too quickly and losing
track of quality control, though even that will be unlikely to
stave off harsh criticism from lawmakers.
"He's going to be taking an awful pummeling, I think,"
Kingston said.
--
Ken Thomas reported from Washington. Associated Press Writer
Malcolm Foster in Tokyo contributed to this report.
(Copyright 2010 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)