The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration is seeking whistleblowers who have knowledge "of possible defects or any wrongdoing" about Takata.
Reuters reports the NHTSA has set up a hotline for current and former employees of the airbag supplier as part of its ongoing investigation into a number of death and injury cases linked to defective airbag inflators, with the promise of legal protection for those who call. Agency representative Gordon Trowbridge explains:
We encourage all individuals with information about the manufacture or testing of Takata air bag inflators, or who have knowledge of possible defects or any wrongdoing by the company, to make this information available to NHTSA.
The news organization itself received numerous reports from former Takata employees wishing to remain anonymous of hiding or altering data and other information linked to the airbags, as well as two from Mark Lillie and Michael Britton regarding the supplier's introduction and use of ammonium nitrate at its facility in Moses Lake, Wash. Both expressed concerns about the lack of safety testing and validation for the chemical before Takata pressed forward with its use in the late 1990s.
Takata, for its part, claimed that it was "committed to working with NHTSA and [its] automotive customers to ensure the safety of the driving public," opting not to comment specifically on the NHTSA's call for whistleblowers, nor on Reuters' own findings.
The post NHTSA Seeking Whistleblowers In Takata Airbag Investigation appeared first on The Truth About Cars.
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