After appearing before a House panel on Tuesday, General
Motors CEO Mary Barra appeared before a Senate Commerce Committee subcommittee
Wednesday to discuss GM’s handling of a faulty ignition switch in some of its
vehicles which has been linked to the deaths of 13 people. Coverage of Barra’s
Senate testimony is much lighter than that of her House testimony. Only two of
the three networks covered it Wednesday evening and there is less print
coverage this morning. Generally, the coverage portrays the Senate hearing as
more harsh than the House hearing, with many reports noting that senators
accused GM of covering up the defect and were skeptical of Barra’s claims that
GM’s culture has changed from that of the “old GM.”
The CBS Evening News reported that senators accused GM “of
covering up a defect that has killed at least 13 people.” CBS added that Barra
faced “many questions,” including why “no one has been dismissed over the
delayed recall.” CBS also noted that while Barra “says the recalled vehicles
are still safe to drive as long as drivers use the key only,” on Friday, a
Federal judge in Texas “will hear a request that all the recalled vehicles be
parked immediately.”
NBC Nightly News reported that Barra “came under withering
attack for the company’s failure to order a recall over a decade ago.” In
addition, GM was “accused of criminal behavior by US senators, many of them
former prosecutors.” NBC added that Barra “still could not answer basic
questions about GM policies and a decade delay in ordering an ignition switch
recall.” NBC added that a “smoking gun” may be an “internal GM document
obtained by NBC News authorizing a redesign to the defective part of the
ignition switch for new cars in 2006.” In addition, “a House investigation has
turned up more internal GM documents that cited high costs as a reason for not
ordering fixes way back in 2005.” According to NBC, the Justice Department “has
launched its own criminal investigation” into the matter.
The New York Times reports that the tone of the Senate
hearing was “much harsher” as “senators more aggressively questioned Ms.
Barra’s contention that the cars are safe to drive and doubted her statement
that the company had moved from a culture of cost-cutting to one of safety and
a focus on the consumer.” Barra “frequently simply sat and listened as the
senators scolded her and the company.” She “frequently drew the ire of the
senators when she repeatedly did not answer questions, saying either that she
did not know or noting that an internal investigation was underway.” The panel
also heard testimony from acting NHTSA administrator David J. Friedman and the
Transportation Department’s inspector general, Calvin L. Scovel III.
The Wall Street Journal reports that as Barra sought to
distance GM from the “old GM,” she was met with harsh attacks from senators who
were clearly skeptical about how different the current company is from the one
that developed the faulty cars. The Journal notes that Sen. Richard Blumenthal
told Barra that if she were serious about breaking with the “culture” of the
old GM, she would agree to compensate those victims whose claims came before
GM’s bankruptcy and warn owners of cars with potential faulty ignition switches
that “they should not drive them until they are fixed – because they are
unsafe.”
McClatchy reports that Barra “withstood a barrage of
questions and accusations” from senators “demanding to know how the automaker
could have failed to fix the ignition switch for more than a decade.” Some “voiced
skepticism about Barra’s candor in denying that she knew about the problem
until Jan. 31 and in promising that the new GM, the one bailed out by taxpayers
in 2009, ‘will do what’s right.’”
Reuters also describes Barra as under attack during the
hearing in which senators accused GM of “criminal” behavior and “a culture of
cover-up.”
A separate story in the New York Times reports that for the
families of people killed in accidents involving the recalled GM cars, what is
“most upsetting” is “the fact that G.M. won’t tell them what they most want to
know.” GM has “refused to disclose publicly the list of the confirmed victims,”
and the “enduring mystery has left scores of grieving families playing a
guessing game.” The families and their attorneys “are running up against a
technological reality beyond G.M.’s narrow definition of victims: Because many
of the cars and their so-called black boxes were damaged or destroyed, there
may not be enough evidence left from the crashes to prove what happened.”
Customers suing for “park-it” order on GM cars
Bloomberg News reports that US District Judge Nelva Gonzales
Ramos will “consider forcing the company to adopt what the customers call a
‘fail-safe solution’ to prevent further accidents while the switches are
replaced.” Bloomberg reports that the “park-it” order was submitted along with
a class-action lawsuit seeking $10 billion from GM, claiming that the cars are
“too dangerous to drive.”
We believe that obtaining legal satisfaction from those who
harmed you shouldn’t require more hardship. That’s why we do everything we can
to streamline the process, and we will file a lawsuit on your behalf if
necessary. If you or a loved one has been affected by this recall, and you
believe it caused an injury, contact Chhabra & Gibbs today by going to
www.cglawms.com or by calling this number: 601-948-8005.
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