Paul Walker’s Death Wasn’t Porsche’s Fault, Car Company Says Amid Lawsuit

Late actor’s daughter files wrongful death complaint, claiming car lacked safety features that could have saved him

A day after deceased actor Paul Walker‘s daughter filed a wrongful death lawsuit against Porsche relating to her father’s 2013 death, Porsche has issued a statement defending itself, asserting that the crash that killed the “Furious 7” actor was the result of “reckless driving and excessive speed.”

“As we have said before, we are very sad whenever anyone is hurt in a Porsche vehicle, but we believe the authorities’ reports in this case clearly establish that this tragic crash resulted from reckless driving and excessive speed,” the auto company told TheWrap in a statement Tuesday.

The denial of responsibility comes after Meadow Walker, 16, filed suit against Porsche in Los Angeles Superior Court, claiming that the Carrera GT that Walker died in lacked safety features that could have either prevented the accident or allowed the actor to survive it.

The Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department determined that the deadly crash was the result of “unsafe speed,” with traffic collision experts finding that the car was traveling between 80 and 93 miles per hour when it collided with an electrical pole and multiple trees. The posted speed limit on the Santa Clarita, California, road where the crash occurred was 45 mph.

Despite the sheriff’s department report, the lawsuit contends that the car was only traveling 45 to 55 m.p.h. when it struck the pole.

Walker was a passenger in the vehicle, and the wife of driver Roger Rodas has also filed suit against Porsche, maintaining that the crash occurred because of a failure in the car’s suspension system, as well as a lack of proper safety features.

In that suit, the automaker has denied wrongdoing, placing the blame on Rodas himself, and also suggests that the car was “misused or improperly maintained,” which “contributed to the alleged incident and to the injuries, loss, and damages, if any.”

The younger Walker is seeking unspecified damages in her suit.

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