The daughter of the actor Paul Walker, who died when a Porsche
he was incrashed in California two years ago, filed a wrongful death lawsuit
against the car company in Los Angeles on Monday, court records show.
Meadow Walker claimed in the complaint that the carmaker had
skimped on safety features which could have either prevented the crash or at
least kept Walker alive.
Paul Walker was a passenger in the 2005 Porsche Carrera
GT driven by Roger Rodas, who lost control before it careened into trees and a
power pole in Santa Clarita, north-west of Los Angeles, killing both men in
November 2013.
The suit said Porsche AG knew the car model had a
“history of instability and control issues” and that the seatbelts were
designed such that in a crash the shoulder belt anchor would be pulled along
with the rear engine compartment while the seat anchor would remain in place.
“This snapped Walker’s torso back with thousands of pounds
of force, thereby breaking his ribs and pelvis, flattening his seat and
trapping him in a supine position, where he remained alive until the vehicle
erupted into flames one minute and 20 seconds later,” the filing said.
“Absent these defects in the Porsche Carrera GT, Paul Walker
would be alive today.”
Porsche could not be immediately reached for comment on
Monday. But attorneys for the German car company said in April that Rodas was
to blame for the crash after a lawsuit filed by his widow against the company’s
North American unit last year.
Attorneys for the company had then denied that the car had
any defects.
Walker’s death at the age of 40 led to a temporary halt in
production of Fast & Furious 7, the latest movie in the successful series
about illegal street racing that helped popularise his career.
The Los Angeles Times has reported that the Los Angeles
county sheriff’s department and California highway patrol found that
unsafe speeds were to blame for the crash, not mechanical problems. The
newspaper said investigators made the determination after consulting with
technicians from Porsche.
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