General Motors Co. could be exposed to billions of dollars in additional claims related to its defective ignition switches after the U.S. Supreme Court turned away an appeal from the company seeking ...
General Motors is close to settling a federal criminal investigation into its handling of the deadly ignition switch defect, according to sources familiar with the matter. Under the agreement that was ...
General Motors said Monday that it will recall an additional 7.6 million vehicles in the U.S. for ignition problems and other safety defects. This latest round of recalls includes 6.8 million older ...
DETROIT — Chrysler is expanding an earlier recall to include 2008 and 2009 model year Chrysler Town and Country's and Dodge Grand Caravans to fix ignition switches that can slip out of position. An ...
Ignition switch problems that have plagued General Motors and Chrysler have now turned up in the motorcycle business. Harley-Davidson is recalling more than 3,300 FXDL Dyna Low Rider bikes because ...
U.S. auto safety regulators—who have been raked over the coals by Congress for failing to detect a broad pattern of ignition defects in General Motors Co. cars—are turning up the heat on Fiat Chrysler ...
Lawyers hired to compensate victims of General Motors’ faulty ignition switches have paid out $594.5 million to settle 399 eligible claims. The numbers were released Thursday in a final report from ...
Remember when General Motors took a lot of heat because it installed sub-standard ignition switches in its cars? More than 30 million vehicles were recalled worldwide, with General Motors paying ...
While the Volkswagen diesel scandal has received the lion’s share of attention recently, General Motors hasn’t fully resolved the ignition switch scandal that began roughly two years ago. On January ...
General Motors (GM) has settled two so-called "bellwether" cases of defective ignition switches involved in accidents. Both of the lawsuits claimed injuries caused by accidents linked to faulty ...
To compensate victims of its deadly ignition switch problems, General Motors will pay at least $1 million for each death, plus $300,000 to surviving family members. Kenneth Feinberg, who has ...