Emotions were raw in a federal courtroom Thursday as a lawsuit against Toyota over a 2006 crash that caused the deaths of three people and the imprisonment of a St. Paul man went to trial.
"My car would not stop," testified Koua Fong Lee in U.S. District Court in Minneapolis. His voice choking, he described how his 1996 Toyota Camry slammed into another car, and a few minutes later, seeing lifeless people being pulled from the other vehicle and sheets put over them.
"I think of the white sheets and the bodies," he said. "It makes my heart break and I am scared. … "
The suit against Toyota claims the brakes on Lee's 1996 car failed and the car accelerated, crashing into the rear of the victims' Oldsmobile Ciera. Lee spent more than 2½ years in prison after being convicted of criminal vehicular homicide.
Driver error, not Toyota, was responsible for the crash, the automaker's attorney said.
"This was a tragedy," Bard Borkon said in his opening statement. "There is a lot of suffering that these families had to endure."
But, he said, "the evidence is going to show that this crash is not Toyota's fault."
In his testimony, Lee, 37, described returning home from church to drop off family members. He pulled off eastbound Interstate 94 at Snelling Avenue and saw cars ahead of him at the top of the exit ramp.