WARREN, Mich. - General Motors CEO Mary Barra said this morning she fired 15 people who either were incompetent or irresponsible in their actions involving fatally flawed ignition switches that are ...
General Motors' deadly ignition switch flaws emerged from an effort to improve its cars. As the company began developing new small cars in the late 1990s, it listened to customers who complained about ...
NEW YORK (CNNMoney) — General Motors knew of an issue with its ignition switch several years before it has previously acknowledged. The company said in a federal filing Wednesday that it discovered an ...
DETROIT (Reuters) - General Motors Co's ongoing safety crisis over deadly ignition switches deepened on Monday with the recall of 8.23 million mostly older cars linked by the U.S. automaker to three ...
General Motors says it has placed a new-found focus on fixing potential problems with parts and its vehicles in the years following its ignition switch scandal. Speaking to The Detroit Free Press, ...
NEW YORK - A program to compensate victims of a faulty ignition switch in General Motors vehicles has approved three new death claims, bringing the total number of deaths linked so far to the switch ...
NEW YORK -- General Motors persuaded the federal judge who oversees nationwide litigation over defective ignition switches to narrow claims by owners who said their vehicles lost value because of the ...
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. lawmakers on Wednesday accused General Motors Co of a "disturbing pattern" of neglecting safety and revealed emails from 2005 in which a GM employee warned a "big recall" ...
In a hearing before the House Oversight and Investigations panel, GM CEO Mary Barra and National Highway Traffic Safety Administration Acting Administrator David Friedman testify Tuesday on concerns ...
The verdict is in. There wasn't a coverup after all. According to an internal probe, top executives at General Motors did not try to hide the ignition switch defect that has plagued the company for ...
NEW YORK -- General Motors has reached a $120 million settlement with owners who claimed that their vehicles lost value because of defective ignition switches, which have been linked to 124 deaths.
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