The US National Highway Traffic Safety Administration said on Wednesday that an eighth US death is linked to a faulty Takata airbag inflator, marking the first reported death since April and the ninth worldwide.
The auto safety agency also said it named a former US Justice Department official to oversee the massive recalls of airbags and the Japanese parts firm’s compliance with a settlement, Reuters reported.
NHTSA spokesman Gordon Trowbridge told reporters on a conference call that the death took place in July in a recalled used 2001 Honda Accord coupe near Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. The unidentified teenage driver was hospitalized after a Takata airbag ruptured. The teen died several days later.
Sources close to the matter said the death involved a 13-year-old boy who was in an early morning crash after he apparently took the keys without permission from a parent and got behind the wheel.
Pennsylvania State Police, in a brief summation issued publicly last summer, showed that a July 22 incident involved a 13-year-old boy driver who was the lone person in a 2001 Honda Accord that went off a road into a wooded area at 4:46 am in Mercer County in western Pennsylvania.
The Accord went down a four-foot embankment, traveled 315 feet, which is about the length of a football field, and then struck a fallen tree. There was no mention of the airbag in the public statement, which said the incident involved an intoxicated driver.
Pennsylvania officials declined on Wednesday to release the official accident report.
Trowbridge said Honda, Fuji Heavy Industries Ltd.’s Subaru unit and Mazda Motor Corp will add an estimated “few hundred thousand vehicles” to the massive recall campaigns based on additional inflator testing and that others may as well.
The expanded recalls for passenger side inflators include the 2005-8 Mazda6, 2003-4 Honda CR-V and 2005-8 Subaru Legacy and Outback. Honda said it was adding 127,000 vehicles.
Takata’s inflators can explode with too much force and spray metal shrapnel into vehicle passenger compartments and are linked to nine deaths and more than 100 injuries.
All of the nine deaths, including the death of a pregnant woman in Malaysia, have been in Honda vehicles.
Reuters reported earlier that civil suits involving most airbag deaths have been settled by Takata and Honda.
Honda said it is working to determine the cause of the death. The company said the prior owner first got a recall notice in 2010. Honda said it mailed a new recall notice on July 21, one day before the crash.
Takata said in a statement that it was working closely with Honda and NHTSA to determine the facts surrounding the incident.
NHTSA said a quarter of vehicles recalled have been fixed, including a third of vehicles in high-humidity areas, where automakers believe the risk is highest for ruptures. But that still leaves about 15 million vehicles unrepaired.
NHTSA said it named John Buretta, a former official in the Justice Department’s criminal division, to serve as independent monitor overseeing the Takata recalls.
In a separate statement, the airbag manufacturer said that Buretta “would have our full cooperation and support.”
Two US senators, Edward Markey of Massachusetts and Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut, praised the appointment but said it is “largely required because NHTSA has moved too slowly and ineptly for years, allowing a patchwork of recalls”. They also want all vehicles with possibly defective airbags recalled.
In November, Takata agreed to pay a $70 million fine for safety violations and could face deferred penalties of up to $130 million under a NHTSA settlement.
The monitor will help regulators oversee one of the biggest and most complex safety recalls in US automotive history, encompassing 23 million airbag inflators in 19 million vehicles manufactured by 12 car companies.