Dodge and Chrysler urge 274,000 owners to stop driving their cars and get the air bags fixed after third death

Dodge and Chrysler owner Stellantis is urgently reminding owners of four of the brands’ vehicles to bring them in to have their Takata air bags repaired after a third death was linked to the issue.

The automaker issued a stop-drive order in November for the 2005-2010 Dodge Magnum, Challenger, Charger and the Chrysler 300 sedan, which were built on a common platform.

At the time, two deaths in unrepaired cars were known to have been caused by ruptured air bag inflators, but a third fatality has now been confirmed.

According to Stellantis, the owner had reached out to ask about the recall in 2018, but never scheduled a repair, despite the company following up with them 114 times.

TESLA CYBERQUAD FOR KIDS ATV RECALLED AFTER ACCIDENT FOR SAFETY STANDARDS VIOLATION

The recall affects 2005-2010 vehicles.

The recall affects 2005-2010 vehicles.
(Dodge)

The car was loaned to a relative this July who suffered the fatal injuries in an accident.

 The Dodge Magnum wagon is no longer in production.

 The Dodge Magnum wagon is no longer in production.
(Dodge)

In July, the owner loaned the vehicle to a family member who was subsequently killed in a crash when the driver-side air bag ruptured on deployment.

CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP FOR THE FOX NEWS AUTOS NEWSLETTER

“Time is a critical element here because the risk increases with each day these air-bag inflators go unreplaced,” Tom McCarthy, global head of Technical Safety and Regulatory Compliance at Stellantis, said.

The Chrysler 300 is built on the same platform as the Dodge vehicles. 

The Chrysler 300 is built on the same platform as the Dodge vehicles. 
(Chrysler)

“We have the parts, and the service is free. We will provide alternative transportation, also free, to help people get to and from our dealerships, as needed.”

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

Stellantis has been sending notices and canvassing owners in person to get he word out, but approximately 274,000 cars are still on the road that have not had the work completed, which takes less than an hour.

Next Post

DC Studios' James Gunn Sticks By His Guns In Fierce Response To Backlash

Tue Dec 20 , 2022
On his personal Twitter account today, James Gunn defended recent decisions made alongside co-head of DC Studios Peter Safran in a series of tweets, saying the pair knew in advance how controversial their hard reset of the franchise might be and blaming the bulk of the outrage levied at them […]

You May Like