ABC TV did not - at a minimum - accurately describe what was depicted. The car was in neutral not drive when this footage was aired claiming to show unintended acceleration.

During a live webcast for the media this afternoon, Toyota Motors Sales U.S.A. presented in great detail what are serious charges about the “validity, methodology and credibility” of a demonstration of alleged “unintended acceleration” in a Toyota Avalon by Professor David Gilbert of Southern Illinois University in front of Congress and depicted in ABC News broadcasts and on-line segments.  (For our previous report: Click Here)

The Toyota charges are reminiscent of similar ones made by Harry Pierce of General Motors against NBC news, after GM learned that NBC news had rigged the burning of a pickup truck with explosives at the height of a controversy over side-saddle gas tanks used in GM vehicles. In that case, the president of NBC news ultimately, after much legal maneuvering, lost his job. The talking head involved is still successfully pursuing similar stories in the same sensational style. GM did, ultimately, recall the pickup trucks for leaky gas tanks.

Whether heads will roll at ABC remains to be seen, but, at a minimum, the network, which has already replaced the false footage it used in its original report on its website, will be forced to respond in detail, if not to ultimately retract its broadcast.

ABC news did not immediately respond to our request for comment. Gilbert declined comment, a new found reticence from one who was previously so publicly vocal.

Instead, ABC is covering this story – with its potentially harmful accusations against ABC on its website – as if ABC is somehow, miraculously, a disinterested bystander in this story.  Click here for this disingenuous reply.

ABC is also using other sources, including Sean Kane, who works for product liability  lawyers as a foil against Toyota. Kane hired Gilbert to investigate Toyota it was revealed in Congressional testimony.

Make no mistake about it, ABC’s charges against Toyota – how they arose, how Gilbert came in front of  ABC’s uncritical cameras  and commentary, what fact checking ABC did, how ABC edited the damaging piece, what ABC did or didn’t  know when it aired the piece,  why its affiliates ran the piece without perspective  – is the story here.

This ABC story also calls into question, once again, the “ethics”  of broadcast news.People in my view should be mad as hell about it — until more answers are forthcoming. (Don’t hold your breath as the mainstream media will circle the wagons to protect ABC and their own similar practices.)

How Congressional Representatives act, given their long history of unaccountability, and given their comments at Toyota hearings post the Gilbert testimony – also remains to be seen.

Moreover, above all, I continue to be concerned about the owners of the recalled and other vehicles, including virtually every new car from other makers that uses electronic throttle controls, in this manic media environment.

Yes, alas yes, there are some deaths involved; but with NHTSA claiming 6,000 deaths and hundreds of thousands of more injuries from distracted driving alone last year, it’s time for some badly needed perspective. Moreover, it is time for Congress and NHTSA to ban cell phone use of any kind. Now!

An analysis conducted by an engineering group, Exponent – also used by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration – as well as testing by Toyota, makes the following charges about Professor Gilbert’s demonstration:

  • The vehicle’s electronics were rewired and re-engineered in multiple ways, in a specific sequence, and under conditions that are “virtually impossible” to occur in real-world conditions without visible evidence.
  • Toyota vehicle electronic systems were “actively manipulated” to mimic a valid full-throttle condition,
  • Substantially similar results were “successfully created in other vehicles” by other manufacturers.

In the demonstration sensationalized on the eve of his testimony by ABC on February 22, Professor Gilbert, assisted by segment reporter Brian Ross, asserted that he had detected a “dangerous” flaw in the Toyota electronic control system that he alleged could lead to unintended acceleration.

The following day, Professor Gilbert offered a preliminary report of his findings in testimony to the U.S. House of Representatives Energy and Commerce Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations.

Engineers at Exponent, one of the country’s leading engineering and scientific consulting firms, as well as Toyota engineers, have reviewed and recreated Gilbert’s demonstration with substantially similar results in representative vehicles of other makes, Toyota said.

Kristen Tabar, general manager of electronics systems, Toyota Technical Center, summarizes three of the major charges with the artificial nature of Professor Gilbert’s demonstration.

  • “First, an electrical circuit that has been re-engineered and rewired will not behave as it was originally designed and engineered,” said Tabar.
  • “Second, no automaker can or should be expected to design detection strategies for artificially created events in the absence of any evidence that such an event can occur in the real world.
  • “Third, if the artificial condition created by Professor Gilbert had occurred in the real world, it would have left readily detectable fingerprints.”
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