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Yamaha
Rhino Rollover &
Recall - Blog |
Posts Tagged ‘Yamaha Rhino’
Wednesday, March 31st, 2010
March 31, 2010, Nashville, TN – Melissa and Richard Lee Bates, of Southaven, Mississippi, and Aundria and Thomas Dilworth, of Olive Branch, Mississippi, filed a wrongful death lawsuit against Yamaha Motor Manufacturing Corporation of America. On October 18, 2008, Emily Ann Bates and Lauren Elizabeth Dilworth, both 11 years old, were riding in a Yamaha Rhino in DeSoto County, Mississippi, when the vehicle at a slow speed rolled over unexpectedly, resulting in fatal injuries to the girls. “The lawsuit charges that the Yamaha Rhino is dangerously unstable and contains multiple design and engineering flaws increasing the likelihood of fatal injuries to occupants in the event of an accident,” stated Mark P. Chalos of Lieff Cabraser.
Read the press release issued by Lieff Cabraser concerning the Yamaha Rino lawsuit.
Tags: Lieff Cabraser, Rhino lawsuit, rollovers, UTV injuries, UTV safety, Yamaha Rhino, Yamaha Rollover Posted in Safety | Comments Off
Thursday, July 16th, 2009
The Grand Haven Tribune reports another tragedy involving a Yamaha Rhino that occurred on June 25, 2009. 29-year-old Melissa VanBeveren of Holland and Al Dietrich 47, of Conklin, lost control of their Yamaha Rhino while driving in an apple orchard almost a mile from 14th Avenue in Wright Township. The Yamaha Rhino crashed into a ravine and hit a large tree.
While Dietrich suffered only minor scrapes and bruises because he managed to jump from the Rhino before it struck the tree, VanBeveren was thrown from the two-seat Yamaha Rhino. She was air lifted from the crash site and transported to Spectrum Butterworth Hospital with multiple injuries in serious condition.
Tags: Accidents, Canada, Yamaha Rhino Posted in Safety | Comments Off
Friday, June 19th, 2009
Within the past three weeks, Yamaha Rhino rollover accidents have resulted in tragic losses for two different families in New York and Kentucky. The Times Union reported that on May 28, 2009, 13 year old James Wyatt Spencer died in a Yamaha Rhino tip over accident near his family home in Knox, New York. Spencer was driving a 2009 Yamaha Rhino with a friend when he hit a patch of wet grass and rolled. The machine flipped and landed on Spencer, causing massive head trauma. On June 13, 2009, Josh Davis, 14 years old, died of injuries suffered in yamaha rhino accident near Manchester, Kentucky. Davis was a student at Holy Cross High School and a member of Holy Cross Church in Latonia.
Tags: Accidents, rollovers, UTV injuries, UTV safety, Yamaha Rhino Posted in Safety | Comments Off
Tuesday, April 7th, 2009
Lieff Cabraser Heimann & Bernstein, LLP has been representing Yamaha Rhino victims for three years. We currently represent more than 100 Rhino clients, and have filed cases in federal and state courts throughout the country. These cases allege that the Rhino is dangerously unstable and lacks essential crashworthiness features. The recent Consumer Product Safety Commission action confirms our long-held view that the Rhino is unduly prone to tipping over.
On February 13, 2009, the Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation coordinated all federal Yamaha Rhino litigation for discovery and pretrial purposes and assigned the case to U.S. District Court Judge Jennifer B. Coffman of the Western District of Kentucky. On March 25, 2009, the Court appointed Elizabeth J. Cabraser of Lieff Cabraser as Plaintiffs’ Lead Counsel.
In addition, Lieff Cabraser is serving as co-trial counsel in a case scheduled to commence trial later this month in California state court. This will be the first Rhino injury case in the nation to proceed to trial.
Update
April 17, 2009
Unfortunately, Yamaha last week successfully sought continuance of the California state court trial on the ground that it needed an expert to address the March 31, 2009 action by the Consumer Product Safety Commission.
Tags: Lawsuits, UTV safety, Yamaha Rhino Posted in Safety | Comments Off
Wednesday, April 1st, 2009
The Rochon Genova law firm of Toronto, Ontario announced today that a proposed class action claim has been issued with the Ontario Superior Court of Justice. The national class action is on behalf of all persons in Canada who suffered personal injury following tip-over accidents involving Yamaha Rhino Recreational Utility Vehicles, and family members of those injured Canadians.
The class action alleges that the Rhino is prone to tip over because of its narrow track-width, high platform, high center of gravity, and top-heavy design, all of which lead the vehicle to easily tip over under normal and foreseeable driving conditions, including at low speeds on even terrain.
The claim was issued as a result of the death of thirteen-year-old Wyatt Bauer, who died when the Rhino he was driving flipped over, causing multiple injuries, including fatal head trauma. The claim will be amended to include the allegations of Colin Baker, whose foot was trapped by the unpadded roll cage of a doorless Rhino that tipped over, resulting in multiple corrective surgeries.
Lieff Cabraser is associated with Rochon Genova, which represents plaintiffs in a wide range of civil cases.
Tags: Canada, rollovers, Yamaha Rhino Posted in Safety | 1 Comment »
Wednesday, April 1st, 2009
On March 31, 2009, Yamaha Motor Corp. USA suspended sales of its Rhino off-road vehicles Tuesday and a repair program after the Consumer Product Safety Commission determined that they had been involved in more than 50 accidents resulting in 46 deaths and hundreds of injuries. As noted in the Los Angeles Times, the commission’s acting chairwoman, Nancy Nord, said she became so concerned about the number of deaths and injuries associated with the Rhino vehicles that “I directed staff to step up their investigative efforts.” More than two-thirds of the reported accidents were rollovers, many involving turns at low speeds and on level terrain, the commission statement said.
The reporter spoke to Heidi Crow of Winsborough, Texas and a client of Lieff Cabraser. Ms. Crow’s 9-year-old son, Jeremy Todd, known as J.T., died in a Rhino rollover accident June 22, 2007. Crow stated:
“This is the first time that I’ve felt like all the work and everything that we’ve been doing over the last 21 months has paid off. There’s been a lot of lives lost that could have been prevented, but the changes are being made, so I’m happy. These repairs address the Rhino’s design defects. If we make it wider, then we make it more stable and we make it safer and we save people’s lives, and that’s what this is all about.”
Tags: repair program, rollovers, Yamaha Rhino Posted in Safety | Comments Off
Tuesday, March 31st, 2009
On March 31, 2009, the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (“CPSC”), in cooperation with Yamaha Motor Corp. U.S.A., announced a repair program of the Rhino 450, 660, and 700 models to address rollover safety defects which have killed at least 46 persons. Until repaired by a Yamaha dealer, these Rhino models should not be driven.
The CPSC’s action followed upon a comprehensive analysis of the safety defects of the Yamaha Rhino that a group of safety advocates and victim families sent the CPSC last month in a report entitled “Citizen Report on UTV Vehicle Hazards.”
Authors of the report included the Center for Auto Safety, the Trauma Foundation, parents of children killed or injured in Rhino rollovers, and Fabrice N. Vincent, an attorney with Lieff Cabraser Heimann & Bernstein, the law firm that assisted in the report’s preparation. Input came from experts in vehicle design, injury causation, and vehicle hazard identification.
“In addition to the 46 deaths, scores of adults, teenagers, and children across America have been left permanently disabled after their hands, arms, feet, and legs have been crushed in Yamaha Rhino accidents. Many of these injuries would not have occurred if Yamaha had incorporated readily available safety measures in the original design of the Rhino,” noted attorney Vincent. “Yamaha’s repair program is an important step in ending this ongoing national tragedy. However, Yamaha must acknowledge its legal responsibility to those that have been injured or killed and undertake additional key safety adjustments to fully protect consumers.”
Tags: UTV injuries, UTV safety, Yamaha Rhino Posted in Citizen Report, Safety | Comments Off
Monday, March 16th, 2009
Scores of adults, teenagers, and children across America have been left permanently disabled after their hands, arms, feet, and legs have been crushed, and some have died, in rollover accidents involving the Yamaha Rhino UTV asserts a recent report issued by victims and consumer safety advocates which has been summarized on OpEd News.
The commentary notes that 38 deaths, many of them of children, are believed to have occurred in Yamaha Rhino accidents in the United States since the end of 2004. One of these was the death of nine-year-old J.T. Crow. Although he was belted, Crow was ejected in a rollover accident and crushed underneath the half-ton Rhino, which was sold by Yamaha without doors or safety netting to contain its occupants.
“Lawsuits filed against Yamaha allege that from its introduction to the market in 2004, the Yamaha Rhino has been a rollover-prone vehicle with numerous safety defects,” stated Fabrice N. Vincent of the national plaintiffs’ law firm Lieff Cabraser Heimann & Bernstein, LLP, and a co-author of the report. “The complaints in these lawsuit have charged believe that none of the injuries or deaths would have occurred if Yamaha had incorporated readily available safety measures in the design of the Rhino that would have protected occupants during a rollover.”
Read the full Op-Ed article at OpEdNews.
Tags: UTV injuries, UTV safety, Yamaha Rhino Posted in Citizen Report, Safety | Comments Off
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