Louisiana Driver’s Death May Be 7th from Recalled Air Bag

By and | June 10, 2015

A Louisiana woman who got an air bag recall notice for her 2005 Honda Civic two days after the crash that killed her may be the seventh fatality linked to the defective Takata Corp. safety device.

The driver, Kylan Langlinais, 22, received the recall notice in the mail April 7, two days after the wreck and two days before she died, according to a complaint filed June 8 in federal court in Lafayette, La.

The driver’s side air bag exploded with too much force and sprayed shrapnel into the passenger compartment after the car left the road and hit a utility pole at about 4 a.m. on April 5, according to the complaint.

The air bag system “violently exploded and sent metal shards, shrapnel and/or other foreign material into the passenger compartment,” according to the lawsuit.

Takata bowed to pressure from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration and agreed May 19 to expand the recall to cover about 34 million air-bag inflaters, the largest product- safety recall in U.S. history. There have been six deaths, five in the U.S., linked to a defect that can cause the bags to deploy with too much force, sending metal shards into the passenger compartment. Previous recalls covered only about 17 million vehicles.

Honda was notified of the Louisiana crash and is gathering additional information, said Honda spokesman Chris Martin. Robert Rendine, a spokesman for Tokyo-based Takata, declined to comment on the lawsuit.

January Death

The most recent previous fatality linked to the defect was the January death of Carlos Solis IV in Houston, Texas, involving a 2002 Honda Accord. Honda has confirmed three other deaths and at least 60 injuries in the U.S. and is investigating a fifth death linked to the flaw. Honda has confirmed another death in Malaysia.

It’s not clear how fast Langlinais was traveling because there were no witnesses although there was substantial damage to the vehicle, so it wasn’t a low speed crash, said Kenneth D. St. Pe, a lawyer for Langlinais’s mother, Crystal Langlinais, who filed the lawsuit. He said he didn’t think alcohol was a factor in the crash.

“When she was in the hospital, they did exploratory surgery and found no other injuries,” he said “Her sole injury was that her throat was cut open.”

The case is Langlinais v. Honda Motor Co., 15-cv-01824, U.S. District Court, Western District of Louisiana (Lafayette).

Topics USA Louisiana Personal Auto

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