Government Report Seems to Back Up Prius Hoax

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By Michael Fumento

As I reported in Forbes Online on Friday, and am scheduled to discuss tomorrow on NBC’s "Today Show" (beginning at 7AM EST), the Balloon Boy in a Prius incident was baloney from beginning to end. Now a congressional memo available in its entirety online has provided further substantiation based on an analysis of the vehicle.

Here’s a summary of what I reported in Forbes, which is essentially a summary of what nobody else in the entire U.S media reported:

Sikes repeatedly says he stood on the brakes or lay on the brakes and he couldn’t even slow the vehicle. Yet Car and Driver tested three cars at full throttle at 100 mph and brought them all to a full stop, including a 540-horsepower Mustang. The 2008 Prius has 110 anemic ponies under the hood.

You can listen to the tape of the 911 operator repeatedly begging Sikes to either stop the engine with the ignition button or put the car into neutral. Sikes never says these functions didn’t work; he says he was afraid to try them giving various contradictory or absurd reasons.

Regarding his refusal to shift into neutral, Sikes told CNN “I was afraid to try to [reach] over there and put it in neutral. I was holding onto the steering wheel with both hands – 94 miles an hour in a Toyota Prius is fast.” Yet

-- We know he spent most of the ride with a cell phone in his hand.

-- He claims he reached all way under the dash to try to physically pull up the floored accelerator. I have average-length arms and can barely touch the pedal in the full up position. There’s an excellent chance Sikes is physically incapable of what he claims. Nobody asked him to repeat the motion. In any case it’s an incredibly awkward movement for somebody who insisted he couldn’t take his hands off the wheel.

-- Finally, the 2008 Prius shift knob is mounted on the dash inches away from the steering wheel, expressly to allow shifting without lifting the right hand.

And here’s something I missed in the original piece, though it’s included in the version on my website: After Sikes stopped the assisting officer observed that the accelerator was in the up position. Why would stopping the car make it pop back up? That makes no sense.

Sikes turned out to have a checkered past. He is $700,000 in debt and owes $20,000 of that on his Prius. He also has a history of filing insurance claims for allegedly stolen items. In other words, it was already case closed. The memo is just playing pile on.

It says that during two hours of test drives of Sikes’ car Thursday, technicians with Toyota and the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration failed to duplicate what Sikes had described. “Every time the technician placed the gas pedal to the floor and the brake pedal to the floor the engine shut off and the car immediately started to slow down,” the document written by the Republican staff of the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform said.

Also, the Prius is designed to shut down if the brakes are applied while the gas pedal is pressed to the floor. If it doesn’t, the engine would “completely seize,” according to the report citing Toyota’s “residential Hybrid expert.”

“It does not appear to be feasibly possible, both electronically and mechanically that his gas pedal was stuck to

the floor and he was slamming on the brake at the same time,” said the memo.

Naturally Sikes’ attorney said “Pay no attention to those facts behind the curtain!” He seems to think it important, as I’ve heard others also say, that Sikes says he has no intention of suing Toyota. Granted I happen to be a lawyer but a quick Google search reveals he couldn’t have sued Toyota in any case. He was physically unhurt. While California is one of the few jurisdictions allowing suits for unintentional infliction of emotional distress, it allows it in only three specific circumstances and Sikes alleged wild ride falls under none of them.

The media will insist that until the government report came out they had no way of knowing. Go back to the beginning of this blog and read what I wrote in Forbes. The evidence was there all along and I reported it two days before the memo was leaked.

Ultimately Sikes has proved himself to be dumber than the proverbial box of rocks. He only got as far as he could because while journalists in school are taught, “If your mother says it, check it out” in this case their motto was “In Sikes We Trust.”

Why, after all, didn’t they question the congressional testimony of Eddie and Rhonda Smith that their Lexus suddenly accelerated on its own to 100 mph and nothing she tried, including braking, putting the car in neutral, or even putting it into reverse worked. Yes, three of the car’s functions all froze at once. What saved them? “God intervened,” they said. Inexplicably, they’ve only now sold it and it worked fine after since the incident.

Like Congress, the media wanted to believe. They wanted a piece of Toyota’s hide and they weren’t about to allow little things get in the way - such as that demonic possession of automobiles might make a good plot line for Stephen King novels but has no place in the investigation of possible wrongdoing on the part of a car company.

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interlopert's picture

For heavens sake people- get your facts before you comment. Toyota employs over 15000 people in the US not to mention thousands more who directly and indirectly rely on Toyota products for their livelihood. There are over 20 million Toyota vehicles on the road in North America, yet statistics show that Toyota vehicles are not more prone to sudden acceleration than other auto makers. That's right, data shows that Toyota actually fares better than most auto makers in the reported/recorded cases of sudden accleration. Even after all this Toyota bashing frenzy- the fact is Toyotas are still among the safest vehicles on the road.

BTW, the Japanese lost in the 2nd WW over 60 years ago- they are now one of the strongest allies the US has in the world.

There is a very interesting article on the Wsshington Post. Link: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/03/15/AR2010031501693.html

User Removed's picture

Per the report, which this Fumento cur claims makes someone other than himself out to be a liar:

"Every time the technician placed the gas pedal to the floor and the brake pedal to the floor the engine shut off and the car immediately started to slow down. NHTSA and Toyota field representatives reported the same results with the 2008 Prius owned by Mr. Sikes."

Per the state patrol officer who helped Sikes get the car stopped:

"Todd Neibert, the officer who gave instructions to Sikes over a loudspeaker, said he smelled burning brakes when he caught up with the Prius. He examined the car when it came to a stop.

"The brakes were definitely down to hardly any material," he told reporters. "There was a bunch of brake material on the ground and inside the wheels.""

http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2010/03/12/national/main6294314.shtml

In other words, this is 100% conclusive evidence the computer malfunction Toyota claims can't happen is the cause of all the accidents, the floor mat exchange is a scam, and every car Toyota has manufactured since 2002 is likely to fail in a similar fashion.

It is EXACTLY what happens when your home computer crashes. If you turn it off and reboot, the problem goes away. The main difference is that when your home PC goes down, you're not doing 90 MPH down the highway.

What the state patrol saw and reported, what Sikes reported, and what this follows up shows, is the brakes were in shreads under circumstances that would be flat out impossible EXCEPT IN THE CASE OF A COMPUTER MALFUNCTION.

EVERY TOYOTA MADE SINCE 2002 CAN FAIL IN THE SAME MANNER AND TOYOTA DOESN'T KNOW HOW TO FIX IT!!!!

Toyota has no financial alternative to lying its ass off and to keep selling its death traps. Dead consumers are better than bankruptcy in the corrupt corporate mind.

TB3's picture

Being a computer programmer and software developer (not for Toyota , thank you), this one I can answer for certain.

The various different computers that are used to control the things we take for granted have failsafes. For example, if the elevator detects a problem with its software it will go to a predetermined (hardwired) floor, stop, and open the door. For carnival rides, the ride is stopped in a safe manner.

The Prius has several computers that communicate with one another. What Mr. Earl (and others) propose is that one of the computers crashed but was 'rebooted' when the car was restarted and did not record the event. This is a valid concern.

The difficulty is that the problem cannot be replicated. As a programmer, I depend on repeatability in debugging my software and helping others (I do software support , too). If the problem cannot be repeated and is not logged somehow, I am in the dark.

Now, I own a Prius, an '06. I have no problems stopping my car with the gas pedal floored. I simply put it in to Neutral; the computer shuts off the gas engine (regardless of where the pedal is), and I brake to a stop. Or I could simply turn the car off.

Does this mean that Mr. Sikes lied? No. It means that the engineers that are trying to fix the problem cannot replicate the problem. Hence, any fix is at best a very educated guess. Considering the number of '06 Priuses out there that have experience the same problem, I will stick to the original programming rather than rely on a fix that would be at best a guess and at worst have unintended side-effects that may render the car undriveable and may cost me my life.

Should Toyota fix this? Of course. They need better data logging for their onboard systems so that multiple failures can be logged should they occur and retained until erased by a qualified technician. It isnt that hard, but it will cost some money . But computer memory these days is cheap.

In the meantime, Mr. Earl and such can continue bicycling or walking. I am sure they will be the healthier for it.

GuntherBunky's picture

…downfall will be a lesson to those trying to pile on.

Not that I have much sympathy for those who've made the mistake of buying into this Hybrid nonsense in the first place, but I smelled a rat on this guy the second I heard him tell his "story".

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