Drivers of
off-road vehicles urged to get safety upgrades Aug 30, 2009 (Miami Herald)
The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission is warning drivers of recreational off-highway
vehicles, and especially drivers of Yamaha Rhinos, to remain vigilant about safety before hitting the trails and while off-roading.
The commission said it has received reports of nearly 60 fatalities involving the 450, 660 and 700
models of the Yamaha Rhino. A number of very serious injuries have also been reported, including injuries to the head and
neck. In March, a free vehicle repair and helmet giveaway was offered to owners of Rhino models 450, 660 and 700s, to enhance
stability, reduce the potential for rollover and protect drivers. About 145,000 vehicles were affected, and the commission
is urging owners to bring their Rhino into a Yamaha dealership for the free upgrades.
For
safety, the commission said all Rhinos must have half-doors, additional passenger handholds, spacers on the rear wheels, and
the rear anti-sway bar removed.
For additional information on the free Rhino
repair program, contact Yamaha at 800-962-7926 or visit www.yamaha-motor.com.
Yamaha's Rhino:
For Some A Deadly Ride Exclusive CBS News Investigation Finds 59 Deaths,
Hundreds Of Injuries Linked To Yamaha's Off-Road Vehicle Aug. 4, 2009 (CBS) By
CBS News contributor Myron Levin
In the swath of Kentucky called the Land Between The
Lakes, the Turkey Bay Off-Highway Vehicle Area is a rugged expanse of hills and woodlands crisscrossed by 100 miles of trails.
Test drivers came here in July, 2002, to try out the Yamaha Rhino, a new breed of off-road vehicle then in development, and
had a mishap that would resonate years later.
Keisuke "Casey" Yoshida, president of a U.S. subsidiary
of Yamaha Motor Co. Ltd., was behind the wheel of a Rhino prototype. Ike Miyachi, a company vice president in charge of Rhino
development, rode beside him in the passenger seat. After descending a long hill to flat ground, the Rhino tipped over, giving
Miyachi a foot injury.
At a meeting weeks later, Yoshida raised a question that now seems prophetic. "Casey
wants update on instability of vehicle for future liability cases," according to minutes obtained by CBS News.
The Rhino was a hit, with more than 150,000 sold after its introduction 15 months later in fall, 2003. But the vehicle,
which looks like a cross between a golf cart with attitude, and an all-terrain vehicle, or ATV, is at the center of a legal
firestorm. At least 59 riders have been killed in Rhino accidents, according to the Consumer Product Safety Commission. More
than 440 wrongful death and personal injury lawsuits are pending, and Yamaha has settled others. Many stem from rollovers
in which drivers or passengers fell or were flung through the open door space to the ground, then smashed by the 1,100 pound
vehicle. Adults and children as young as 3 years old have suffered gruesome injuries, including amputated limbs and crushed
legs, arms or heads.
Plaintiffs say the Rhino is dangerously unstable due to its unusually narrow stance, high
ground clearance and lack of a rear differential to help in turning. They also claim the Rhino's seat belts tend to unspool
during rollovers, resulting in belted occupants being partially ejected.
The Rhino has "significant problems,"
said Inez Tenenbaum, who in June became chairman of the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission. "The public needs to
be aware that, already, 59 people have been killed in these vehicles."
Under pressure from the agency, Yamaha
on March 31 announced a "free repair program'' to improve the Rhino's handling and stability-seemingly a
recall in everything but name. The company agreed to install spacers on the rear axles of the vehicles to make them a few
inches wider, to remove their rear anti-sway bars, and install protective half-doors on Rhinos that don't already have
them. Owners who watch a safety video when they bring in their Rhinos will also get a $100 coupon toward purchase of a helmet.
Yamaha stressed that the action was not a recall, but a "voluntary repair program." Avoiding the term "recall''
rankled some agency officials and consumers, but in agreeing to make the repairs, Yamaha insisted on calling it something
else.
In an interview with CBS News, Tenenbaum said the safety commission is continuing to investigate. She said
that if the Rhino is found to be too dangerous even with the changes, she would be willing to seek a ban.
Yamaha
says it has cooperated fully with the safety commission. The company maintains there is nothing wrong with the Rhino, and
that rollovers don't occur when drivers follow instructions on warning labels and in the owner's manual. The Rhino
is "a safe, reliable and versatile vehicle,'' and "virtually every Rhino-related incident involves at least
one warned against behavior (such as failure to wear a seatbelt and/or helmet, underage driver, excessive speed, alcohol/drugs
or inattention to terrain/collision),'' according to a statement issued by Yamaha Motor Corp. USA.
Jon
Crowley, an off-road enthusiast who runs the website UTVGuide.net and agrees with Yamaha, said he believed most of the injured
would have blamed themselves but for plaintiffs lawyers trolling for clients on the Internet and TV.
The Rhino
is not an ATV, but a "side-by-side''-- a category of off-road vehicle that is gaining popularity and is not subject
to any government standards. Unlike ATVs, which riders straddle like a motorcycle, side-by-sides are more jeep-like, with
seating for two, a steering wheel instead of handlebars, a rear cargo bed -- and safety features such as seat belts and a
roll cage.
The Rhino has a narrower track and higher ground clearance than most all other popular side-by-sides-enabling
it to crawl over rocks and through tight spaces. But just as a stool tips more easily than an easy chair, experts say a narrower,
taller vehicle is more apt to roll over in turning maneuvers or uneven terrain. Engineers for plaintiffs' lawyers say
the Rhino has a low stability factor, a rough arithmetical measure of rollover risk based on a vehicle's track width and
the height of its center of gravity.
Yamaha has touted the Rhino's off-road prowess with a made-up word -"terrainability.''
"Don't Just Tackle Tough Terrain,'' said a Rhino ad. "Make It Say Uncle.''
Yet serious
accidents have allegedly occurred under seemingly benign conditions-at low to moderate speeds, on relatively flat ground,
and without drivers knowingly doing anything adventurous or sporty. Rollovers have even occurred at dealerships when employees
were moving Rhinos around the lot, or taking customers on test drives, court records show. Like Ike Miyachi, the president
of Yamaha France suffered a leg injury when his Rhino tipped in 2005.
There have
clearly been accidents in which riders failed to follow safety instructions. The CPSC identified cases where people failed
to wear seatbelts or helmets.
But Jason Shamblin, a Birmingham, Alabama, lawyer representing dozens of Rhino plaintiffs,
said he has "not filed any cases where my client has been operating or has been a passenger on a Rhino that has been
driven as aggressively as I have seen on some Rhino TV ads.''
The product safety commission lent some
support to such claims. In announcing the repair program in March, the agency said "Of the rollover-related deaths and
hundreds of reported injuries, some of which were serious, many appear to involve turns at relatively low speeds and on level
terrain.''
Milton D. Grimes is one of at least several Rhino owners allegedly hurt the first day they
got behind the wheel. A former sheriff's deputy and school construction planner, Grimes bought his Rhino in September,
2004, to haul brush and water trees on his rural property near Bakersfield, CA. A couple of days later, he tried it out on
desert scrubland near his home. Going 10 to 15 miles per hour on flat, but rough, terrain, Grimes said he made a right turn
and the Rhino flipped, chopping his left leg against the ground. Grimes crawled away in search of help, but made it only a
few hundred yards. When he failed to come home a few hours later, his son went looking and found him by following the Rhino's
tracks.
It appeared he might lose his mangled leg, but nine operations saved it. Grimes regained the ability to
walk, but has limited mobility and chronic pain. His lawsuit filed in January, 2005, ended in a confidential settlement. "I
just wish that nobody else would have to go through what I have been through-and other people have been through worse,''
Grimes said. "Anybody who gets on one of these (Rhinos) should be aware they're dangerous.''
Yamaha
told CBS that its testing showed Grimes was going faster than he said, and disputed his claim that he was wearing his seat
belt. The company settled the case without admitting liability.
Justin Miller was 16 when he took his first ride
on a Rhino -- and came home missing a hand. An experienced ATV rider, the Northridge, CA. teen was on a camping trip over
Memorial weekend in 2008 when he took his family's new Rhino for a spin. He had descended a low hill to fairly level ground,
and said he was going less than 15 miles per hour when the Rhino tipped. Apparently in shock, he didn't realize how badly
he was hurt until he saw blood everywhere and his hand nearly severed from his wrist. Doctors at Stanford University Medical
Center performed seven surgeries but were unable to save the hand.
Saying the company is still investigating the
accident, a Yamaha spokesman cited a police report stating that the Rhino was going about 20 miles an hour on the hill, and
hit a rock or bump.
Despite the trauma of his loss and constant pain, Miller seems remarkably philosophical. "In
my mind, I've always believed that some things happen for a reason, so I've tried to keep an optimistic view.''
Never an outstanding student before the accident, Miller returned for his senior year, worked harder than ever, and for the
first time he says he got straight `A's'. Now preparing to start college, he is counting on his lawsuit to get him
a sophisticated prosthesis costing well over $100,000. "What they're (Yamaha) doing is endangering people,''
Miller said. Their "main concern is making a profit.''
Some bereaved parents have turned anti-Rhino
crusaders, including Texas resident Heidi Crow. Her 9-year-old son, J.T. Crow, died of head injuries when a Rhino allegedly
travelling about 15 miles per hour tipped over on a logging trail. Another, John Sand of Lebanon, Ohio, lost his 10-year-old
daughter Ellie in October, 2007, when the family was at a barbecue with members of their church and a guest was giving rides
on a Rhino. Sand created a website in her memory, where he has posted court papers and Yamaha documents.
Yamaha
says both cases substantiate its view that operator error, not faulty design, is to blame. The company recommends that Rhinos
be driven by licensed drivers at least 16; the Crow child was a passenger on a Rhino driven by his 12-year old sister. The
21-year-old operator of the Rhino that rolled over on Ellie Sand had allowed three other kids to crowd into the back of the
vehicle, though the Rhino is designed for a single passenger. He was charged with vehicular manslaughter, a misdemeanor, and
sentenced to 90 days in jail.
Sand still blames the vehicle's design. "There's some simple changes
that …could have been made from the beginning that would have spared my daughter's life and other peoples'
arms and legs,'' he said.
While pundits mourn the advance of the nanny state, there remains widespread
tolerance for the long arc of injuries and deaths from off-road vehicles. Since the 1980s, at least 10,000 people have died
in ATV accidents-more than one-quarter of them kids under 16, according to data from the CPSC. The annual death toll has been
rising with more ATVs in the field. According to some experts, the situation shows the pitfalls of relying mainly on warnings
to control the risks of dangerous products, instead of on safer designs.
The product safety commission took action
in the mid-1980s amid a spike in injuries and deaths. In December, 1987, the agency sued five leading distributors, including
Yamaha, declaring ATVs to be an "imminently hazardous consumer product.'' The companies agreed in a settlement
to stop distributing 3-wheel ATVs, the most unstable kind-though they did not have to recall existing 3-wheelers. Otherwise,
the main focus was consumer education, including blunt warning labels and safety videos.
The commission also wanted
a stability standard for ATVs to reduce tipovers. The industry balked, arguing that such stability measures, based on vehicles'
physical dimensions, were a poor predictor of real-world rollover risk. The agency backed off, settling for the companies'
promise not to lower the stability of future models.
For a while, things got better. In 1988, the year of the
settlement, there were 250 ATV-related fatalities. Despite rising ATV sales, the toll mostly hovered between 200 and 250 deaths
for several years. Then, casualties rose sharply with growing sales of ATVs. ATV injuries requiring emergency room treatment
nearly tripled from 52,800 in 1997 to 150,900 in 2007, according to commission figures. For the first time, deaths topped
500 in 2001; then exceeded 650 in 2003 and 800 in 2005.
At the same time, warnings about all manner of possible
driver errors strengthened the industry's hand in liability cases. The companies suddenly had a "buffet of defenses''
against almost any claim, said Ralph E. Chapman, a Mississippi lawyer for plaintiffs in ATV and, more recently, Rhino cases.
The companies could "just go through the buffet line and pick out what to eat.''
Carol Pollack-Nelson,
a human factors psychologist formerly with the CPSC and now a safety advisor to businesses, said the situation illustrates
the need to design out hazards rather than rely primarily on warnings.
"You have a product that's inherently
got some pretty serious dangers,'' and people use it "the way they think it's intended to be used,''
she said. "They're not trying to drive their granny to the store ... It goes fast, it goes over bumps, it goes over
open terrain. Why else would they have bought the thing?''
With more than 140 subsidiaries and affiliates
worldwide and nearly $16.8 billion in 2008 sales, Japan-based Yamaha Motor Co. Ltd. is a leading distributor of motorcycles,
snowmobiles, and watercraft, along with ATVs and the Rhino.
Lawsuits against the company and its American units
involved with the Rhino are scattered across the U.S. -- though a majority have been consolidated in three courts for the
purpose of legal discovery. More than 120 cases are pending in the superior court of Orange County, CA, home of Yamaha Motor
Corp., USA, the Rhino distributor. Dozens more are in state court in Georgia, where another Yamaha subsidiary manufactures
the vehicles. Suits filed in federal courts have been brought before a U.S. district judge in Louisville, Ky. None of the
cases has been tried.
Yamaha has produced hundreds of thousands of pages of internal documents, and at least a
dozen company officials have had their depositions taken --though most of the information is locked up tight. The records
remain secret under protective orders demanded by Yamaha's lawyers. Even so, a number of documents and transcripts filed
as exhibits tell the Rhino story.
The "NGV (New Generation Vehicle)'', as the Rhino was known inside
the company, began to take shape in 1999. The vehicle would become the "new generation of off-road vehicle for outdoor
man,'' in the words of an internal document. Existing side-by-side models were utilitarian work vehicles and not much
fun. Yamaha targeted a crossover market of hunters, fishermen, and aging off-roaders wanting something easier to ride than
an ATV, and the ability to take along a friend. A promotional video touting the Rhino's narrow stance showed that it fit
in the bed of a full-size pickup, eliminating the need to pull a trailer.
No government standards applied to side-by-sides,
and Yamaha wanted to keep it that way. There was a risk of the Rhino being defined as a motor vehicle and falling under authority
of the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, with its myriad safety standards-particularly if Rhinos were driven
on public roads. Yamaha "must not allow a classification of `motor vehicle' for the NGV,'' declared an internal
company document in May, 2000. As a precaution, the company used tires that weren't suitable for paved surfaces, and warned
against driving the Rhino on pavement and public roads. In a statement to CBS News, Yamaha said "the Rhino was
always intended to be an off-road vehicle" and because there are different regulatory issues for off-road and on road
vehicles, "this document simply reflects that Yamaha was aware of these different regulatory environments.''
The Rhino quickly caught on, bringing "more of an extreme off road capability to the market,'' said
Steve Nessl, marketing manager for Yamaha Motor Corp., USA. Some reviews were effusive, including this one in Popular Mechanics:
"Through some sort of engineering magic, Yamaha has built the first side-by-side vehicle that can compete with an ATV
in serious off-road prowess.''
Early on, there were warnings signs, too-revealed in phone logs of a company
database, the Yamaha Call Management System. In October, 2003, a Yamaha dealer in Virginia reported that two employees had
been injured when a Rhino flipped while travelling about 5 miles per hour. One suffered a broken wrist; the other minor injuries.
Also that month, another dealer reported that a technician had "rolled unit over in paved lot.'' The dealer was
"concerned about stability,'' said the log, adding that the dealer was advised: "Unit not for pavement use."
A Minnesota dealer reported in November, 2004, that a customer suffered serious injuries on a test drive, including
a broken leg and ruptured spleen. "From what dlr could tell from inspection cust was going at excessive speeds and making
sharp maneuvers when she rolled the unit,'' the log said.
In July, 2005, the Farm Industry News sponsored
a "Utility Vehicle Shootout'', asking a panel of farmers to rate popular side-by-sides. The Rhino finished a
close second out of 10 models. But after the competition, an 18-year old intern for the publication, riding as a passenger
in a Rhino, broke his leg when the vehicle tipped. "Witnesses say they were not going more than 5-7 MPH,'' according
to the phone log, but added that the driver had been drinking.
At a Florida dealership,
a customer broke his ankle on a test ride with a salesman in November, 2005. In June, 2006, a Delaware man reported that he'd
sold his Rhino after rolling it twice. "A 60-year-old lady bought the unit to haul around firewood,'' the phone
log said.
Many lawsuits stem from injuries suffered when the rider put his leg through the open door space- either
unintentionally or as a protective reflex when the vehicle tipped. According to plaintiffs, scores of injuries would have
been avoided if Yamaha had equipped the Rhino with leg restraints, such as the short half-doors it eventually offered as a
retrofit.
The company did not have to look far for examples of where the doors might have helped. Ike Miyachi,
the vice president who suffered an injured foot when the prototype for the Rhino tipped, said in a September, 2006, deposition,
that he stuck out his leg in an attempt to brace the vehicle as it tipped on its side.
In 2005, the president
of Yamaha France was injured when he got a leg outside a Rhino, court records show. The French executive, Jean-Claude Olivier,
then ordered the installation of diagonal bars in the openings near the floor to keep riders' legs inside. When officials
in Japan learned about the fix, they ordered the bars removed.
In blaming accidents on Rhino drivers, Yamaha does
not spare its own. In a statement to CBS News, Yamaha said Olivier suffered "a medium ankle sprain'' because
he "performed an aggressive maneuver causing a rollover.'' As for removal of the diagonal bars installed by its
French unit, the statement said company engineers feared they might become a tripping hazard or be used as footrests-putting
feet outside the cabin.
Records show that Yamaha had begun investigating the use of leg protection by early 2006
-- but didn't offer the half doors until August 2007. The retrofit offer covered 2004-07 Rhinos. Doors became standard
on the 2008 model.
In deposition testimony, senior Yamaha engineers said they had considered using doors in the
first place-then gave a surprising explanation for deciding not to. Doors would create such a feeling of safety, they said,
that riders might not wear helmets or seat belts. In a deposition in May, 2008, Takanori Suzuki, former project leader for
the Rhino, said even now the only reason to include doors is that "occupants are intentionally sticking their legs out
in situations involving aggressive driving and abrupt maneuvers.''
A couple of times over the last two
years, Yamaha sent letters to Rhino owners expanding on safety warnings. But the product safety commission is investigating
whether Yamaha made timely disclosures to the agency of possible safety risks.
Company representatives did brief
commission staff, including at a meeting in August, 2006. But in January, a few weeks before Yamaha suspended sales of the
Rhinos and notified owners of the necessary safety improvements, the agency issued a subpoena to Yamaha for a large volume
of records.
Agency officials have declined to discuss the reason for the subpoena. But current and former product
safety officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the commission usually relies on self-reporting by companies, and
that subpoenas are rare. The sources said the action showed the agency thought Yamaha's disclosures may have been incomplete.
The agency can levy financial penalties on companies found to have withheld information about possible product defects.
Yamaha says it has cooperated fully-at the same time arguing there were no defects to report.
"The
company's been very upfront with the commission,'' Yamaha lawyer David Murray said in an interview. "But
… we fundamentally do not agree that there is any sort of design problem with this product, and we've made that
clear in each of our conversations with the commission.''
Yamaha Motor Corp. Offers Free Repair For 450, 660, and 700 Model Rhino Vehicles CPSC advises consumers not to use the off-road vehicles until repaired FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE March 31, 2009 Release #09-172 CPSC.GOV
WASHINGTON,
D.C. - The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC), in cooperation with Yamaha Motor Corp. U.S.A., of Cypress, Calif.,
is announcing a free repair program to address safety issues with all Rhino 450, 660, and 700 model off-highway recreational
vehicles. Yamaha has also agreed to voluntarily suspend sale of these models immediately until repaired. Consumers should
immediately stop using these popular recreational vehicles until the repair is installed by a dealer.
CPSC
staff has investigated more than 50 incidents involving these three Rhino models, including 46 driver and passenger deaths
involving the Rhino 450 and 660 models. More than two-thirds of the cases involved rollovers and many involved unbelted occupants.
Of the rollover-related deaths and hundreds of reported injuries, some of which were serious, many appear to involve turns
at relatively low speeds and on level terrain.
About 120,000 of the 450 and 660 model Rhinos
have been distributed nationwide since Fall 2003. Some units have been equipped by Yamaha with half doors and additional passenger
handholds, either before or after sale.
Yamaha’s repair includes the installation
of a spacer on the rear wheels as well as the removal of the rear anti-sway bar to help reduce the chance of rollover and
improve vehicle handling, and continued installation of half doors and additional passenger handholds where these features
have not been previously installed to help keep occupants’ arms and legs inside the vehicle during a rollover and reduce
injuries. Owners of the affected Rhinos should stop using them and call their dealer to schedule an appointment to have repairs
made once they are available and to take advantage of a free helmet offer.
Yamaha is also
voluntarily implementing the same repair program and suspension of sale for the Rhino 700 model, in order to ensure customer
satisfaction. Consumers should stop riding the 700 model until it is repaired. About 25,000 Rhino 700s are part of this repair
program.
Once these repairs have been made to their vehicles, Rhino users should always
wear their helmet and seatbelt and follow the safety instructions and warnings in the on-product labels, owner’s manuals
and other safety materials. The Rhino is only recommended for operators 16 and older with a valid driver’s license.
All passengers must be tall enough to place both feet on the floorboard with their back against the seat back.
For additional information, contact Yamaha at 800-962-7926 anytime, or visit the firm’s Web site at
www.yamaha-motor.com
Woman uses tragic loss to help save others Posted: March 31, 2009 07:07 PM EDT
Updated: April 1, 2009 04:14 PM EDT KLTV News
- Tyler (Molly Reuter)
WINNSBORO, TX (KLTV) - This
is a warning for all ATV riders. If you, or someone you know owns a Yamaha Rhino 450 or 660 listen up.
The Consumer Product Safety Commission said repairs need to be made to prevent accidents that have killed
46 people since 2003. Sadly, one of those victim's was a nine-year-old boy from East Texas. His mother's fight to
prevent another death may have helped spark today's changes.
"I feel like one
person on a mission can do anything if there is hope," said Heidi Crow of Winnsboro.
It
was a victory, almost two years in the making for Crow. Yamaha's announcement won't bring her son J.T. back,
but Crow says his death now holds an entirely new meaning.
"We were shocked,
and we couldn't believe it," she said. "It is the first time I've felt joy, real joy, in 21 months.
J.T. was killed in June of 2007 when the Rhino 450 he was riding in rolled over. It is
these types of accidents Crow says she and other victims around the country have been fighting to stop by asking Yamaha
to make the Rhinos safer.
"When you go out and purchase a side by side, and you think
it's going to improve the quality of your life and add fun to your family, it should do that, not destroy it," said
Crow.
The CPSC said two repairs are needed on the Rhino 450 and 660 to help reduce the
chance of rollover and improve handling. First, the installation of a spacer on each of the rear wheels. Second, removing
the rear anti-sway bar. East Texas Yamaha dealerships say they are aware of the changes.
"Anyone
that owns one, or anything, if you've had a problem in the past this is something Yamaha is offering as a free upgrade
to them," said Kyle Hughes with H & W Honda and Yamaha.
Crow said, right
now, she just hopes everyone takes the warning seriously.
"What happened to J.T. should
not happen to another family," she said.
The CPSC did not include the Rhino 700 as one
of the models that need the repairs, but Yamaha says it will include the Rhino 700 in its free repair program. For more information,
click on the Big Red Box, and find the story "Yamaha Rhino Repair Program."
Birmingham AL, (WiredPRNews.com) — The ATV Attorney Alliance (“Alliance”) launched an unorthodox, but apparently effective internet ad
campaign today with the twin goals of educating the public to the dangers of the Yamaha Rhino, and putting pressure on the
United States Consumer Product Safety Commission (“CPSC”) and Yamaha Motor Corporation to remedy what they call
design defects causing rollovers of the Yamaha Rhino and death and traumatic injury to occupants.
Alliance spokesman, Phillip L. Jauregui, said
the ad “is an unauthorized satire of a female Yamaha Rhino employee sitting at a desk, filing her nails and taking call-in
reports of injuries from all of the people injured by Rhino rollovers.” Jauregui said: “the point of the
ad is the fact that hundreds of people have been killed or traumatically injured on these ATVs, but the CPSC and Yamaha are
not fixing the problem. Instead, they are letting the problems continue.”
“The ad makes the point that this tragedy continues every
day, and seemingly Yamaha is doing nothing more than logging the injuries.” Jauregui said: the “CPSC needs
to act and it needs to act now to address the Rhino rollover problem. The very weekend that we filmed this video, another
child was killed from a Rhino rollover. What is the flipping hold-up? Solve this problem and worry about the legal
issues later.”
The
ad ends with an ominous scene of the female employee logging hundreds - or perhaps thousands - of complaints on yellow notes,
stuck on a wall that it literally covered from top bottom with notes, representing the lost lives and limbs from Rhino rollovers.
Jauregui said: “We
know this video evokes emotion, and points the finger at the CPSC and Yamaha to solve this problem, but if that is what is
necessary – then that’s what we’ll do.”