DETROIT (AP) — General Motors CEO Mary Barra will be questioned this fall by lawyers suing GM over its defective ignition switches.
Barra is one of 35 current and former GM employees who will be questioned, attorney Bob Hilliard said last Thursday. The depositions begin May 6 with the questioning of GM customer experience chief Alicia Boler-Davis. Barra’s deposition, scheduled for Oct. 8, would be the last.
Hilliard sued GM last July on behalf of people who were injured or killed in crashes allegedly caused by faulty ignition switches. A trial is scheduled for January 2016 in U.S. District Court in New York.
The switches could slip into the “off” position, disabling power steering and air bags. The lawsuit alleges GM knew about the defective switches as early as 2001 but didn’t recall any cars until last year.
Barra told Congress she learned about the defective switches in December 2013, a month before GM began recalling 2.6 million affected vehicles.
GM has already admitted violating the law, paying a $35 million fine and agreeing to strict federal oversight.
It has also paid undisclosed settlements to the families of 67 people killed in crashes caused by the switches as part of a compensation fund overseen by Kenneth Feinberg. The fund has also compensated 113 people injured in crashes.
The plaintiffs represented by Hilliard are not part of that settlement process.
GM and its employees could also face separate criminal charges as a result of an ongoing Justice Department investigation.
- Posted March 23, 2015
- Tweet This | Share on Facebook
GM CEO to be questioned in ignition-switches lawsuit
headlines Oakland County
headlines National
- 50 Years of Service: ABA has been a ‘stalwart ally’ for LSC funding
- ACLU and BigLaw firm use ‘Orange is the New Black’ in hashtag effort to promote NY jail reform
- Biden recalls time he bluffed knowledge of torts case and why he changed his mind about civil-trial work
- Lawyers’ ‘barrage of personal attacks’ on opponents started with tissue-box toss, appeals court says
- Longtime prosecutor resigns after judge tosses him from case, citing Perry Mason-type revelations
- 24% of law students expect to work in public service, survey says