Florida Leads In Firestone Tire Deaths

Florida Leads In Firestone Tire Deaths

In August 1999, Ford contacted Explorer owners in Saudi Arabia because the company believed the Firestone tires on their vehicles were defective and needed to be replaced.

But 7,000 miles away in Jacksonville, Alaina Culleton didn’t know that. Three months later, Culleton was driving with her daughter, Athena, 10, on State Road 202 in a 1994 Explorer equipped with the same model tires that were replaced in Saudi Arabia. The passenger-side rear tire came apart at 60 mph and the vehicle flipped several times.

Athena was thrown from the Explorer and killed instantly.

She was one of 28 people in Florida who might not have died if Ford Motor Co. and Bridgestone/Firestone Inc. had warned customers in the United States about the dangers of the same model tires being replaced overseas.

That’s a key finding of a four-month St. Petersburg Times analysis of accidents involving sport utility vehicles and Firestone tires in Florida since 1995. The study is the first comprehensive look at the toll the nation’s worst auto safety crisis has taken on Florida. The Times found:

At least 41 people died in Firestone-related accidents in Florida since 1997 — far more than reported by the federal agency that oversees the auto industry.

Sixteen of the Florida fatalities occurred after Ford began replacing Firestone tires in 16 other countries without telling the American public.

Even after the tire problems came to light, and the federal government opened an investigation, 12 more people died in Florida before Firestone recalled the tires.

Eleven people died in Florida in accidents involving Firestone tires that the company did not include as part of a national recall that began last August.

The Times examined six years of state accident reports, federal government crash data and court documents, and interviewed victims, lawyers, company officials, and tire and vehicle experts.

What emerged is that Florida’s intense heat exacerbated the defects of Firestone tires — hot temperatures make them disintegrate. The combination of heat and bad tires, and the propensity of the Explorer to flip, has been deadly.

Thirty-six Florida accidents led to the 41 deaths. The number of fatal crashes is likely higher, though, because many people did not know what caused their accidents until years later or did not keep track of the type of tires they used. Underestimations

At least 113 additional accidents left 230 more people injured, some with brain damage, limb loss or paralysis. Dozens more left people physically unscathed but emotionally shaken.

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration estimates that 174 people died throughout the nation in these accidents. Based on the Times’ study, Florida would lead the nation in the number of Firestone-related deaths. But consumer groups think the government has vastly underestimated the devastation everywhere.

Only about six of the 600 staff members who work for the federal highway agency are investigating Firestone tires, agency spokeswoman Liz Neblett said. And they only review cases brought to their attention.

Ford and Firestone will not reveal how many accidents they have discovered, and declined to specifically address the Times findings. But company officials along with lawyers and consumer groups have asked the Times for its results — which found far more accidents than any estimate by other organizations attempting to compile the information.

“Firestone and Ford killed more people than the Oklahoma City bombing,” said Dale Query, whose son, Patrick, was killed in Brevard County in 1999. “Both companies knew this was a problem. They had an opportunity to do the right thing. They could have saved lives.”

Ford and Firestone officials acknowledge that some tires had design and manufacturing problems and that for years they failed to disclose crucial information about possible tire defects. But Firestone also blames Ford for the design of the Explorer, which has a tendency to flip.

“We absolutely believe these accidents are tragic,” Firestone spokeswoman Jill Bratina said. “Everyone here at every level has been touched very deeply.”

Ford spokesman Ken Zino did not return repeated phone calls or respond to a letter for comment. Zino’s employees have spoken about certain aspects of the recall but would not talk specifically about the Florida accidents.

Ford spokesman Mike Vaughn would say only that the company is cooperating with a federal probe of the tires.

A federal investigation is now in its second year, but the government has yet to issue a mandatory recall or tell the public if other tires or vehicles have the same problems. It asked Firestone to replace another 1.4-million tires — but the company refused.

In Florida, Attorney General Bob Butterworth says the companies put consumers in danger and that he will file a lawsuit against them claiming they engaged in unfair and deceptive trade practices.

Meanwhile, Ford and Firestone are spending millions of dollars to settle lawsuits, redesign vehicles and tires and to launch advertising campaigns that would move them beyond last year’s debacle.

Ford announced on Tuesday that it would replace all 13 million Firestone Wilderness AT tires now on Ford vehicles — twice as many tires as Bridgestone/Firestone included in its August recall. Saudi complaints

After analyzing road test data, government research and scientific data “we simply do not have enough confidence in those tires in keeping our customers safe,” said Jacques Nasser, Ford’s president and chief executive.

Firestone sales were down 22 percent in the first quarter of 2001 compared with the same time last year. Ford estimates the recall will cost more than $ 590 million.

But as Ford and Firestone try to regain public confidence, consumer groups are demanding a wider recall of Firestone tires.

“Ford and Firestone has been a wake-up call for the nation,” said Clarence Ditlow, executive director for the Center for Auto Safety, a nonprofit consumer group that has monitored the problem. “You can’t trust companies or the government to protect you.”

Ford is aggressively settling lawsuits, but company officials continue to blame the tire. Ford officials point out that Goodyear tires that were installed on nearly half the Explorers made from 1995 to 1997 have caused little trouble. They further contend that Explorers have lower death rates than other SUVs.

Firestone says Ford is at least partly to blame for designing vehicles prone to flip and instructing customers to put too little air in their tires.

In Saudi Arabia, the complaints began in mid-1997. Drivers told Ford dealers that the Firestone tires on their Explorers were coming apart, causing vehicles to roll over. Injuries and even deaths were reported.

Firestone and Ford initially chalked the troubles up to Third World conditions: rough roads, hot climate and customers who didn’t put enough air in their tires and drove too fast. There was talk by the companies of a possible recall, but officials decided against it.

In July 1998, State Farm, the nation’s largest insurer, reported to the federal government a spike in claims involving Explorers and Firestone tires in the United States. Still, the companies did not take action here or overseas.

Firestone officials contend that industry data did not reflect an unusual number of problems and have since changed the way they analyze data. Ford officials say they did not know about the trouble until they received information from Firestone.

“When you have millions and millions of vehicles on the road, it’s like a proverbial needle in a haystack,” Ford spokesman Jon Harmon said.

Over the next several months, complaints mounted in Saudi Arabia. Ford began talking recall again, but found no ally in Firestone. Firestone officials feared a recall would be costly and spread to the safety-conscious United States. Lawsuits would surely follow.

An internal Ford memo dated March 12, 1999, written after numerous accidents in Saudi Arabia, noted that “Firestone legal has some major reservations” about replacing tires in Saudi Arabia. The memo, made public during a congressional inquiry last year, said of the tiremaker: “First, they feel that the U.S. (Department of Transportation) will have to be notified of the program, since the same product is sold in the U.S.”

The memo also says Firestone officials “believe the best course of action for the vehicles already in the market is to handle the tire issues on a case-by-case basis.”

In August 1999, Ford decided to replace Firestone tires with Goodyear tires on its Explorers in Saudi Arabia. Firestone refused to pay any of the millions of dollars in costs, so Ford changed the tires as part of a “customer satisfaction” program without advertising it as a recall.

Ford ended up replacing tires in 16 South American and Asian countries. 28 die between recalls

But the first public hint of real trouble in the United States came in February 2000, when a Houston TV station reported a rash of complaints about Firestone tires and Ford Explorers. The federal government opened its investigation in May.

There was no official recall of tires until August. That’s when Firestone formally recalled 6.5 million ATX and AT tires. In the year between the unofficial recall in Saudi Arabia and the official recall in the United States, 28 Floridians were killed in Firestone-related accidents.

“Every one of these cases could have been avoided had Ford and Firestone disclosed the information in a timely way, 1999 at the latest,” said Ralph Patino, a Coral Gables lawyer who represents 30 victims in cases against Ford and Firestone clients, most in South Florida. “Bottom line: Had there been a recall or an advisory in the U.S., I wouldn’t have these cases. You just say to yourself, ‘My God, this is unbelievable.'”

Consumer groups are aggressively lobbying the government to expand the recall. That could include the remaining 33 million similar tires still on the road.

“I know other families are still driving around with these tires believing they are safe,” said Christina Sagrista, who lost control of her 1997 Ford Explorer after her tire, not on the recall list, blew out. She survived along with her son Christopher, 2. But twin brother Alexander was killed.

Ford, which temporarily stopped installing Firestone tires on its Explorers and now gives customers a choice of brands, is pressuring Firestone to expand its recall, according to news reports last week.

Firestone is fighting an expanded recall, saying the tires on the road today are safe.

“Tires can fail,” said Bratina, the Firestone spokeswoman. “Just because a tire fails doesn’t mean it’s defective.”

Patino & Associates, P.A.

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