February 26, 2010 5:55 PM

Toyota Victim Recounts "Near Death" Trip

(CBS/AP)  Updated at 3:47 p.m. EST

As her Lexus sped uncontrollably at 100 miles per hour down a Tennessee highway, Rhonda Smith was sure she was going to die.

It was back in October of 2006 and Smith was on her way to visit her 85-year-old father. After getting on Interstate-40, her Toyota-manufactured car started acting as though it were possessed, accelerating steadily past 70, 80 and 90 mph even as Smith applied the brakes, the emergency brake and, at one point, shifted the car into reverse.

It finally started to slow down on its own and Smith lived to tell the tale of her "near death" experience. But her attempts to do so were only met with frustration.

In recounting this harrowing tale to lawmakers Tuesday, Smith set the tone for congressional hearings into the response of Toyota and federal regulators to a rash of sudden unintended accelerations in the U.S. and other nations that have been linked to 34 deaths and the recall of millions of vehicles.

In her testimony, Smith blasted the Japanese automaker for failing to acknowledge the problem and criticized the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration for chalking up her ordeal to a mere problem with the car's floor mats.

"Shame on you, Toyota," Rhonda Smith, of Sevierville, Tenn., said at a congressional hearing. Then she added a second "shame on you" directed at federal highway safety regulators.

Related:
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Smith, along with her husband Eddie, has insisted since that day that the problem had to do with the car's faulty electronics. As evidence, she testified that after the car came to a stop, her husband was able to shift the car from park into neutral even though he didn't have the required key fob.

"This should not have happened," she testified. "As the car went into neutral, the car actually tried to start by itself with the engine turning over several times."

After repeated attempts to notify Toyota of a problem with its vehicles, Smith said the automaker eventually blamed them for incorrectly applying the brakes.

Following their contact with Toyota, the couple notified NHTSA, only to eventually receive the explanation about the floor mats.

Smith said that D. Scott Yon, one of NHTSA's safety defects engineer, came to inspect the car, but "he seemed to arrive with the pre-conceived idea to sell to us, that it was a floor mat problem," Smith said in her written testimony.

Meanwhile, the president of Toyota's U.S. operations acknowledged to lawmakers on Tuesday that the company's recalls of millions of its cars may "not totally" solve the problem of sudden and dangerous acceleration.

"We are vigilant and we continue to look for potential causes," Toyota's James Lentz told a congressional panel. However, he repeated his company's position that stuck gas pedals in some of the company's most popular model cars and trucks were caused by one of two problems - misplaced floor mats or sticking accelerator pedals.

He insisted electronic systems connected to the gas pedal and fuel line did not contribute to the problem, drawing sharp criticism from lawmakers who said such a possibility should not be ruled out.

In addition, CBS News has learned that as early as 2005 Toyota engineers were redesigning software in response to complaints of cars surging unexpectedly, reports CBS News Correspondent Sharyl Attkisson.

Lentz said Toyota has not completely ruled out an electronics malfunction and is still investigating causes of the sudden accelerations. Still, "we have not found a malfunction" in the electronics of any of the cars at issue, he said.

As to Smith's harrowing story, "I'm embarassed for what happened," Lentz said. "I want her and her husband to feel safe about driving our products."

Toyota has already recalled 8.5 million vehicles because of sticky gas pedals and floor mats that can trap pedals. Lentz has said before that he was confident the fixes Toyota was installing for those issues would correct the problem.

But when asked broadly by Energy and Commerce Committee Chairman Henry Waxman, D-Calif., whether the two recalls Toyota put in place would "solve the problem," he replied: "Not totally."

However, he said chances were "very, very slim" of unintended accelerations once the recall process was complete. Lentz also said Toyota is putting in new brakes that can override the gas pedal on almost all of its new vehicles and a majority of its vehicles already on the road.

© 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 See all 23 Comments
by sadstateofcbs February 27, 2010 9:44 AM EST
- Car took off to over 100 miles an hour
- She shifted in to neutral then reverse
- Engaged the parking brake that is mechanical (no computer involvement)
- Called her husband to hear his voice
- Car had 2 sets of floor mats as confirmed by NHTSA
- She resold the car and second owner drove it 27,000 miles with no incident

Leave the other ridiculous parts out. If she had engaged the parking brake at that speed it would have instantly caused a most spectacular crash.
She made a mistake with floor mats and lied about it. Found a lawyer that could see the dollar signs but still thought nothing about selling the car to someone else. And CBS continues to do right by Obama and the unions by jumping on the "bad toyota bandwagon" through incomplete reporting.
She should be tried for perjury and CBS news should continue to be ignored.
Reply to this comment
by me97581 February 23, 2010 5:17 PM EST
What happened to NEUTRAL to get the car to slow down, let the engine explode.

The American drivers share part of the blame for not being taught how to drive safely
Reply to this comment
by doctor_know February 23, 2010 6:12 PM EST
What Happened to driving a manual transmission that gives the driver DIRECT CONTROL over the car?
by richie3465 February 23, 2010 3:03 PM EST
most of the toyota cars sold in the us are made in the us.
Reply to this comment
by Clark Nova February 23, 2010 3:40 PM EST
Not just rednecks but non-union SCAB rednecks.
by parisdakar February 23, 2010 2:47 PM EST
Too much drama...Toyoda sobbing about letting his customers down, this Lexus driving moron and her sob story, congressional witch hunts. Every manufacturer has problems from time to time. Toyota should step up, fix the problems, take care of the customers and be done with it.
Reply to this comment
by Interlogger February 23, 2010 1:50 PM EST
Why didn't she just turn the key off?
Reply to this comment
by book_of_wally February 23, 2010 2:33 PM EST
Dont think Lexus had keys that year, dont know when they stopped and switched to the button.
by parisdakar February 23, 2010 2:56 PM EST
or throw the key FOB out the window.
by 71542 February 23, 2010 1:19 PM EST
I saw the lame attempt by the media to shift focus to Japan's auto makers...to wit, Automakers Misled The American People. Well for me it just won't work. Congress is a bag of dirt and cannot manage the business of the American government. The Japanese automakers have nothing to do with the state of confusion and crippling theft endured by the taxpayer. Congress is to blame for the economy and the wayward practices of the banking, real estate and loan industry.
tgmithras 12:30 PM
Reply to this comment
by GreatDepression February 23, 2010 1:08 PM EST
"...an internal company memo that shows the car manufacturer saved $100 million in 2007 by persuading government regulators to narrow their investigation. The regulators agreed to just a limited recall. "

GW BUSH WAS THE U.S. PRESIDENT ON 2007!

Conservatives put the Profits of Corporations, like Toyota, ahead of the Safety of Americans.
Reply to this comment
by retiredgustav February 23, 2010 1:04 PM EST
If that was me I would have pulle out my gun and shot it on the spot!
Reply to this comment
by quotelawrence February 23, 2010 1:04 PM EST
this is ridiculous has anyone ever hear of turning off a key, or pulling the emergency brake, these people should be questioned on what to do in case of an emergency because common sense seems to be neglected as in the case of hot coffee and Mcdonalds being to blame.
Reply to this comment
by whatheduce February 23, 2010 1:44 PM EST
Did you even read the article?

In the second paragraph it says "her Toyota-manufactured car started acting as though it were possessed, accelerating steadily past 70, 80 and 90 mph even as Smith applied the brakes, the emergency brake and, at one point, shifted the car into reverse."

Maybe you should read the article before laying blame.
by Decimiller February 23, 2010 2:07 PM EST
And what would turning off the key on an Avalon or Lexus accomplish? It wouldn't turn off the electrical system, it bypassed by the "Start" button on the dash. Officer Mark Saylor was on the 911 call for 52 seconds before the crash that killed him and his family, he surely was experienced with the operation of motor vehicles that exceeded your notion of "common sense". No offense, but we're not talking about a common issue or defect.
by watchdogtexas February 23, 2010 1:03 PM EST
Things left out of the story.

Where is the proof to go with the story.

When the problem occurred on I-40, when did she pull over and call a tow truck and have the car taken to a dealer for repair.

After this horrendous ordeal. If they still drove the car, they are either liars, or stupid.

Do these writers expect me to read a story and believe it with no proof of fact mentioned. Just because someone said it to congress and someone wrote about it.

Show me the BEEF when you write a story, or do not do it at all.

Lets get real!!!
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