Sometimes things are not as they initially appear to be. When Toyota vehicles were recalled after a series of Toyota crashes, the media and the public were quick to pile on the automaker. After five months of investigating, the picture has changed. While Toyota could be responsible for a large number of crashes, the investigation has yet to find any defect beyond the defects Toyota reported. Further, in over half of the crashes that have been blamed on problems of “sudden acceleration,” the driver was not actively breaking at the time of the accident, according to a government study.

The lack of braking at the time of the accident implicates driver error, or “pedal misapplication” as the cause of these accidents. These finding were presented by the U.S. Transportation Department to members on Congress on Tuesday, The Wall Street Journal reports. The vehicles are equipped with so called “black boxes,” data recorders designed to keep track of what is happening with a vehicle at the time of a crash. The devices are capable of surviving most crashes.

With billions of dollars on the line, this issue isn’t going anywhere for quite some time. But like any issue involving lawyers, multi-national corporations and government–it’s going to take a while.

Related Resources:

You Don’t Have To Solve This on Your Own – Get a Lawyer’s Help

Civil Rights

Block on Trump’s Asylum Ban Upheld by Supreme Court

Criminal

Judges Can Release Secret Grand Jury Records

Politicians Can’t Block Voters on Facebook, Court Rules