2 deaths, Canadian probe led to huge Toyota recall
Associated Press
DETROIT
An investigation by Canadian safety regulators into a crash that killed two people touched off a global recall of nearly 2.9 million Toyota SUVs, according to U.S. government documents posted Thursday.
Last week Toyota announced the huge recall because the rear seat belts can be cut in a severe crash. If that happens, the belts won’t restrain passengers.
Canadian investigators found the problem in crash tests done after two rear-seat passengers died in a May 2011, collision in eastern Canada between a Toyota RAV4 and a Chevrolet Silverado pickup. The front-seat occupants survived.
The unusual crash drew interest from Canadian regulators, who did crash tests in October and found that the belts could come in contact with a metal seat- cushion frame in a severe crash. Transport Canada, the Canadian auto-safety regulator, presented its findings to Toyota, which did its own investigation and confirmed the problem, according to a Transport Canada statement.