World U.S. fines Toyota $1.2bn for defrauding consumers

Vunderkind

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Japanese car giant, Toyota, is required to pay 1.2 billion dollars for defrauding consumers in the fall of 2009 and early 2010.

The U.S. Justice Department announced the agreement reached with Toyota on Thursday.

Under the agreement, Toyota admitted on Wednesday that it misled U.S. consumers by concealing and making deceptive statements about two safety issues which caused a type of unintended acceleration.

``Rather than promptly disclosing and correcting safety issues about which they were aware, Toyota made misleading public statements to consumers and gave inaccurate facts to Members of Congress’’, said Attorney General Eric Holder.

Holder added that if any part of the automobile turns out to have safety issues, the car company had a duty to be up front about them, to fix them quickly, and to immediately tell the truth about the problem and its scope.

Besides huge penalty, an independent monitor will be imposed on Toyota to review and assess policies, practices and procedures relating to Toyota's safety-related public statements and reporting obligations.

Transportation Secretary Anthony Foxx said Wednesday's penalties send ``a powerful message’’ to all manufacturers to follow the U.S. recall requirements or they will suffer ``serious consequences.’’
 

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