PDA

View Full Version : Ford Won't Sell Cars to Arkansas Police over Lawsuit



SouLRioT
12-21-2004, 10:30 AM
Associated Press

EL DORADO, Ark. (AP) -- A dispute with Arkansas' attorney general over claims made about its police interceptors has led Ford Motor Co. to suspend delivery of its Crown Victoria police cars to Arkansas agencies.

The Arkansas attorney general's office is investigating whether the Crown Victoria Police Interceptors are really as loaded as Ford says they are. On hold are 249 cars, including 40 for the state police.

"We believe some of the representations made by Ford regarding the CVPI are false," the attorney general's office said. "We examined approximately 20 systems identified in Ford's marketing materials as CVPI features. Based upon our examination of the 2000 model, some of the features are present, others are not."

Ford says all the advertised features are present, including a heavy-duty frame, heavier springs, shocks and front stabilizer bar, as well as an additional rear stabilizer.

"In contrast to the attorney general's claims, the steel wheel, found on all police interceptor vehicles, is heavy duty," Ford says.

The CVPI is also equipped with an engine oil cooler and a higher idle speed, which promotes greater coolant circulation speed for extended idling periods frequent in police duty vehicles.

"In short, the Arkansas attorney general's findings are without merit," said Tony Gratson, Ford's government sales manager.

Union County Sheriff Ken Jones said five cars were due for delivery Tuesday but that Ford refuses to release them into Arkansas. They were being held in Memphis, Tenn., on Monday.

Ford has asked for a waiver from the attorney general for future sales, which would allow it to sell the cars without the threat of litigation, but the state refused, Gratson said.

"Ford dealers will not deliver vehicles, regardless of order date, because the state's top law enforcement department is incorrectly contending that the vehicle does not possess the attributes as advertised," a Ford statement says.

A side-by-side comparison of different models is scheduled for Wednesday at the state police garage in Little Rock.

Meanwhile, Jones is not happy that his deputies will be doing duty in "worn-out patrol units."

"I'm exploring my avenues, because we had a public bid for these police cars and a local dealership won those bids," he said. Jones said there is not a comparable car on the market.

"I'm concerned that one of my deputies is going to have to respond to a call in a worn-out, high mileage vehicle. I can see the situation going down real fast, if we can't keep our fleet up."

http://www.officer.com/article/article.jsp?id=19527&siteSection=1

N40GL
12-21-2004, 03:29 PM
MERCEDES-BENZ RECALLS SEDANS; CARS MAY RUN OVER CHEATING HUSBANDS

Houston Auto Faces Possible Murder Charges

[BorowitzReport.com] Mercedes-Benz today recalled all luxury sedans manufactured since 1999, after company engineers located a defect that makes the cars run over cheating husbands.

“The car’s navigational system, rather than homing in on a street address, pursues the cheating husband of the driver instead,” a company spokesman said.

“Once the sedan has the husband in its sights, it will run over the husband again and again and again,” the spokesman added.

While the Mercedes-Benz spokesman indicated that incidents of a Mercedes sedan wreaking savage revenge on a philandering husband were “rare,” he added, “Even one time is one time too many.”

In Houston, the recall news had a dramatic impact on the murder trial of Clara Harris, as the judge in the case dismissed all charges against the scorned wife and shifted the blame to her Mercedes instead.

“Clearly, this was a case of a good woman driving a bad car,” the judge said.

While prosecutors in Houston mulled the possibility of bringing new murder charges, this time against Mrs. Harris’s Mercedes itself, a lawyer for the car said there was a strong possibility that the sedan would plead insanity.

“This car is not a danger to pedestrians,” the car’s lawyer said. “This car needs help, yes, this car needs our understanding -- but punishment? No."

The Mercedes recall, as well as the recent Oklahoma case in which a Ford Explorer flipped over and crushed a cheating husband, should serve as cautionary tales, says leading automotive criminologist David Duggan of the University of Minnesota.

“If you’re going to cheat on your wife, make sure she drives a subcompact, such as a Mazda Miata,” Dr. Duggan says.