LegallyBrunette
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- Joined
- Sep 25, 2012
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Thoughts:
If sleep deprived and on drugs, he may have hit the accelerator instead of the brakes, hence the mounds of dirt behind the tire marks.
If sleep deprived, on drugs, and just coming out of a potentially very serious accident, what is the likelihood off him navigating a dam successfully?
Could he be in the lake?
Just today there was an accident here where a driver went through the front of an aged care home due to hitting the accelerator instead of the brake.
Could also have been that the car was in D instead of R.
Just found this while searching - not beyond realms of possibility that the accelerator was the problem - seems it is a known problem in Toyotas and there are a multitude of lawsuits about it.
This complaint was for the same make and model (2003)- which is not on official recall list.
http://www-odi.nhtsa.dot.gov/owners...t00f1BdNCtmxG1CJKy1219BJnpbvn6HWK!-1092791677
ON 7-11-13, GOING AT HIGHWAY SPEED ON ROUTE 52 IN NORTH CAROLINA, THE THROTTLE BECAME STUCK WIDE OPEN CAUSING MY CAR TO ACCELERATE BEYOND MY CONTROL. I SLOWED DOWN TO GET OFF ON THE SIDE OF THE HIGHWAY, BUT I COULD NOT STOP THE CAR, ONLY SLOW IT DOWN .....
http://content.usatoday.com/communi...assive-recall-to-prevent-jamming-gas-pedals/1A year after its "unintended acceleration" trouble began, Toyota today is announcing that it's going to expand its recall of floor mats to include nearly 2.2 million more Lexus and Toyota vehicles in the U.S. The mats can jam against accelerator pedals -- causing so-called pedal entrapment. The company calls the recalls "voluntary," but federal regulators say they requested them.
The recalls show that Toyota is still bedeviled by issues surrounding unintended acceleration, which last year resulted in the recall of hundreds of thousands of cars to replace floor mats that can jam against accelerator pedals or to replace pedal mechanisms that can stick.