Takata pleads guilty to U.S. fraud charge linked to faulty air bags

Reuters  |  DETROIT 

By Joseph White

DETROIT (Reuters) - Japan's Corp <7312.T> on Monday pleaded guilty to a felony charge as part of an expected $1 billion deal with the U.S. Justice Department that includes compensation funds for automakers and victims of its faulty airbag inflators.

After Takata's guilty plea, a federal judge in Detroit was hearing objections on Monday to the raised by lawyers for some victims of inflator ruptures, who argue the will be used by automakers to avoid liability, a court clerk said.

hopes to wins court approval of the settlement, a key hurdle to securing the backing of an investor or acquirer that can fund a turnaround effort and help it grapple with billions of dollars in costs related to the auto industry's biggest-ever recall.

Lawyers for U.S. vehicle owners have sued Honda Motor Co <7267.T>, Nissan Motor Co <7201.T>, BMW AG , Ford Motor Co , Mazda Motor Corp <7261.T>,and other automakers, alleging they knew about the defective air bags for years but kept using them.

At least 16 deaths have been linked to exploding airbag inflators. The defects have led 10 automakers to recall more than 31 million cars worldwide since 2008. All but one of the deaths have occurred in Honda vehicles.

Kevin Dean, a South Carolina lawyer for some victims suing automakers, said in a court filing on Monday that the plea agreement is "wrought with inaccurate, incomplete and misleading assertions of fact" that could help automakers avoid liability.

last month had agreed to plead guilty to a single count of wire related to receiving payment for the faulty deflators across state lines as part of a with federal prosecutors.

U.S. prosecutors have charged three former senior executives in with falsifying test results to conceal the defect linked to the recall of about 100 million air bag inflators worldwide.

In January, agreed to establish two independently administered restitution funds: one for $850 million to compensate automakers for recalls, and a second $125 million fund for individuals physically injured by Takata's airbags who have not already reached a with the company.

Both funds are expected to be administered by compensation expert Kenneth Feinberg, who managed a similar fund for General Motors Co .

Automakers in the United States are set to continue recalling defective inflators through 2020. U.S. safety regulators have said automakers are responsible for replacing defective airbags no matter what happens to

(Reporting By David Shepardson in Washington and Joseph White in Detroit; Editing by Meredith Mazzilli)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

Takata pleads guilty to U.S. fraud charge linked to faulty air bags

DETROIT (Reuters) - Japan's Takata Corp <7312.T> on Monday pleaded guilty to a felony charge as part of an expected $1 billion deal with the U.S. Justice Department that includes compensation funds for automakers and victims of its faulty airbag inflators.

By Joseph White

DETROIT (Reuters) - Japan's Corp <7312.T> on Monday pleaded guilty to a felony charge as part of an expected $1 billion deal with the U.S. Justice Department that includes compensation funds for automakers and victims of its faulty airbag inflators.

After Takata's guilty plea, a federal judge in Detroit was hearing objections on Monday to the raised by lawyers for some victims of inflator ruptures, who argue the will be used by automakers to avoid liability, a court clerk said.

hopes to wins court approval of the settlement, a key hurdle to securing the backing of an investor or acquirer that can fund a turnaround effort and help it grapple with billions of dollars in costs related to the auto industry's biggest-ever recall.

Lawyers for U.S. vehicle owners have sued Honda Motor Co <7267.T>, Nissan Motor Co <7201.T>, BMW AG , Ford Motor Co , Mazda Motor Corp <7261.T>,and other automakers, alleging they knew about the defective air bags for years but kept using them.

At least 16 deaths have been linked to exploding airbag inflators. The defects have led 10 automakers to recall more than 31 million cars worldwide since 2008. All but one of the deaths have occurred in Honda vehicles.

Kevin Dean, a South Carolina lawyer for some victims suing automakers, said in a court filing on Monday that the plea agreement is "wrought with inaccurate, incomplete and misleading assertions of fact" that could help automakers avoid liability.

last month had agreed to plead guilty to a single count of wire related to receiving payment for the faulty deflators across state lines as part of a with federal prosecutors.

U.S. prosecutors have charged three former senior executives in with falsifying test results to conceal the defect linked to the recall of about 100 million air bag inflators worldwide.

In January, agreed to establish two independently administered restitution funds: one for $850 million to compensate automakers for recalls, and a second $125 million fund for individuals physically injured by Takata's airbags who have not already reached a with the company.

Both funds are expected to be administered by compensation expert Kenneth Feinberg, who managed a similar fund for General Motors Co .

Automakers in the United States are set to continue recalling defective inflators through 2020. U.S. safety regulators have said automakers are responsible for replacing defective airbags no matter what happens to

(Reporting By David Shepardson in Washington and Joseph White in Detroit; Editing by Meredith Mazzilli)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

image
Business Standard
177 22