GM
fund approves $594.5 million in ignition claims
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[December 10, 2015]
By David Shepardson
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - General Motors Co's
<GM.N> independent fund set up to compensate victims of accidents
involving faulty ignition switches awarded $594.5 million and approved
399 death and injury claims, the fund said on Thursday.
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GM's costs related to the ignition switch defects now top $2
billion, including a $900 million settlement with the U.S.
Department of Justice in September, the fund said in its final
report before winding up operations.
The fund run by compensation expert Ken Feinberg said 91 percent of
proposed awards were accepted by the victims. That included all 124
death claims, and 16 of 18 serious injury claims.
The Detroit automaker set up the fund in June 2014 under intense
legal and political pressure for failing for nearly a decade to
disclose ignition defects in older cars.
The fund covered injury and death claims in 2.6 million cars
recalled from 2003 through 2011. Neither GM nor Feinberg sought to
reduce awards if victims bore partial responsibility, or if crashes
occurred before GM emerged from bankruptcy restructuring in July
2009 as a new company.
Seventy-four percent of approved death claims and 61 percent of all
eligible claims had at least one issue involving unsafe behavior by
the driver, such as not wearing a seat belt, speeding, drunk driving
or falling asleep behind the wheel, the report said.
GM was not legally required to pay nearly one-third, or 128 of the
399 claims approved, because they took place before the company's
June 2009 bankruptcy, the report said. Only one victim has yet to
decide whether to accept the compensation offer.
Claimants who were not physically injured in this and other cases
are appealing a U.S. court ruling upholding GM's bankruptcy shield.
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"We faced the ignition switch issue with integrity, dignity and
clear determination to do the right thing both in the short and long
term," GM spokesman Jim Cain said, adding that the fund "was fair,
compassionate, generous and non-adversarial."
Victims had to waive the right to pursue lawsuits or seek punitive
damages against GM if they accepted a settlement.
Bob Hilliard, a Texas lawyer who represents hundreds of ignition
switch plaintiffs, said Feinberg and his team "did a yeoman's job. I
thought they were fair."
GM is far from done with litigation over the faulty ignition
switches. Hundreds of personal injury and death lawsuits are pending
in U.S. District Court in New York. A series of trials due to begin
in January are expected to provide a template for possible
settlements of remaining cases.
(Reporting by David Shepardson; Editing by Richard Chang)
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