MINNEAPOLIS — A Minnesota driver who went to prison for a crash that killed three people grabbed national attention when he was freed amid reports of Toyota Camrys that would mysteriously accelerate. Eight years after that accident, his lawsuit against the Japanese automaker goes to trial Wednesday. Koua Fong Lee and other survivors of the crash are seeking damages from Toyota.
Lee’s Camry rear-ended another family’s Oldsmobile at high speed in 2006. He always insisted the car was at fault, but spent 21/2 years in prison before attorneys could use the national surge in reports of sudden acceleration accidents to reopen his case. Toyota insists Lee’s car was not defective and that he caused the crash by hitting the gas instead of the brake.
Jury selection is scheduled for Wednesday, with opening statements expected Thursday.
THE CRASH
Lee was driving his family home from church on June 10, 2006, when his car suddenly sped up while exiting a freeway in St. Paul. The Camry was going at least 75 mph when it slammed into an Oldsmobile driven by Javis Trice-Adams Sr., who had stopped at an intersection. Trice-Adams and his 9-year-old son died at the scene. His 6-year-old niece, Devyn Bolton, was left paralyzed and died in October 2007. Two other passengers in Trice-Adams’ car were seriously injured.
Lee insisted his brakes failed, but he was convicted of criminal vehicular homicide. He won a new trial after evidence surfaced of other Toyotas experiencing sudden acceleration and questions were raised about the adequacy of his defense. Prosecutors opted against a retrial and he went free in 2010.
THE LAWSUIT
U.S. District Judge Ann Montgomery has dismissed several claims, including Lee’s plea for damages resulting from his incarceration. Much of the trial will focus on others who survived the crash but say they’re still suffering, including Jassmine Adams, a daughter of Trice-Adams who was 12 at the time, and Quincy Ray Adams, father of Trice-Adams. Devyn Bolton’s mother, Bridgette Trice, is also a plaintiff. Lee and other passengers in his car are seeking damages for bodily and mental harm.
TOYOTA’S WOES
Reports began surfacing in 2009 of sudden unintended acceleration in some Toyota vehicles. The automaker recalled more than 10 million vehicles, paid large fines and last year agreed to pay the U.S. government a $1.2 billion settlement, admitting it concealed information from consumers and regulators. While Toyota Motor Corp. has settled some cases, it still faces more wrongful death and injury lawsuits.
Toyota has blamed drivers, stuck accelerators or floor mats that trapped gas pedals for the sudden acceleration claims.
THE LEE CAMRY
Lee claims a defect in his 1996 Camry’s accelerator control system caused the throttle to stick and that the car’s brakes were unresponsive. Toyota says the accelerator and brake systems on Lee’s car were well-designed and did not malfunction.
Toyota’s attorneys issued a statement Tuesday saying the company sympathizes with the families affected by the accident but is confident the evidence will show Lee’s vehicle wasn’t the cause.
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