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February 9, 2010 3:34 PM

Toyota to Recall Prius in Japan for Brakes

(CBS/AP)  Updated at 11:46 p.m. EST

Toyota has filed papers to recall about 223,000 hybrid cars in Japan, including the Prius, for braking problems — the latest in a string of embarrassing safety problems at the world's largest automaker.

Tuesday's recall affects models that went on sale last year. There have been about 200 complaints in Japan and the U.S. about a delay when the brakes were pressed in some conditions.

Toyota Motor Corp. President Akio Toyoda will hold a news conference at the automaker's Tokyo office later Tuesday to outline details of the braking problem, including plans for a possible recall in the U.S., a company official told The Associated Press.

U.S. safety officials have launched an investigation into problems with the brakes. CBS News has learned the company is now inspecting all of its gas-electric hybrid models for the same problem.

The braking problem for the third-generation remodeled Prius is the latest safety woe for Toyota, which is already trying to fix problems in millions of vehicles recalled for other defects, including a sticky gas pedal.

The automaker has fixed the programming glitch in Prius models that went on sale since last month, but had done nothing yet on the cars sold before then, according to Toyota.

There have been nearly 200 complaints in Japan and the U.S. of drivers experiencing a short delay before the brakes kick in - a problem that can be fixed with a software programming change. The delay doesn't indicate a brake failure.

The problem is suspected in four crashes resulting in two minor injuries, according to data gathered by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, which is investigating the matter. Toyota says it's cooperating with NHTSA's investigation.

Toyota said its plug-in hybrid is also being recalled, but that is still a largely experimental model for rental and government use in limited numbers, and isn't for mass commercial sale.

The company ran a contrite ad during the Super Bowl declaring that "in recent days, our company hasn't been living up to the standards that you expect from us," reports CBS News correspondent Celia Hatton.

"Right now, everyone is sensitized to any possible defect in any Toyota," Richter told Hatton.

On Wednesday, Congressional hearings will look into when the company and the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration knew something was wrong with Toyota's vehicles.

State Farm Insurance alerted the US government as far back as 2007 about sticking gas pedals that caused sudden, dangerous acceleration. And in Japan the government has begun its own Prius investigation, Hatton reports.

At least 100 drivers of Prius cars in the U.S. have complained to Washington that their antilock brakes seemed to fail momentarily on bumpy roads. Toyota and the Japanese government have also received dozens of complaints in total about brake problems. The U.S. says the problem is suspected in four crashes that caused two minor injuries.

Toyota says a software glitch is behind the problem and says it has already fixed vehicles that went on sale since last month. It has also said that the brakes will work if the driver keeps pushing the pedal.

© 2010 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Add a Comment
by kbbpll February 8, 2010 11:49 PM EST
The FUD machine rolls on. There was a solution to this Prius "problem" eight years ago. You push harder on the brake.
Reply to this comment
by wdh3007 February 8, 2010 9:54 PM EST
My guess is this was caused by the Obama administration and since the Govt now owns GM or what is now Govt Motors they in essense caused the Toyota recall. What do you do to get people to but your products you eliminate your competition in order to make money down the road!
Reply to this comment
by robbyr2 February 8, 2010 8:44 PM EST
According to our local news, the NHTSA is requiring Toyota to recall the 2010 Prius to fix exactly the same "problem" that Ford is fixing in it's Fusion hybrid. Nationalism? Racism?
Reply to this comment
by GreatDepression February 8, 2010 4:40 PM EST
Happy to see Fatique finally with the Toyota defects!

Now, Toyota can ignore any new defects because our Mass Media will skip it since it the same old boring news.
Reply to this comment
by book_of_wally February 8, 2010 1:53 PM EST
Anyone who buys a Toyota is stupid in the head.
Reply to this comment
by daffy64 February 8, 2010 3:07 PM EST
As opposed to stupid in the feet?
by jwesel1 February 8, 2010 5:13 PM EST
As opposed to stupid in the feet?
==================================
Yes, since the feet will be too busy slamming on the brakes.
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