Ford Settles with Family of Mets Prospect After $131 Million Verdict in Explorer Rollover Case

A Mississippi jury on Thursday ordered Ford Motor Co. to pay $131 million in compensatory damages to the family of minor league outfielder Brian Cole, who was killed in the rollover of his Ford Explorer Sport. The automaker quickly settled with the family for a confidential sum before the punitive damages phase of the case, ESPN reports.

Brian Cole, tabbed as a future star for the New York Mets, died in March, 2001, when his vehicle left the highway and flipped over in Florida.

The family argued that Ford was liable because the Explorer Sport was rollover-prone, and had a defective seatbelt that failed to keep Cole from being thrown from the vehicle even though it was fastened.

Under terms of the settlement, Ford admitted no liability, and defended the safety of the vehicle:

This was a tragic accident and our sympathy goes out to the Cole family for their loss, but it was unfair of them to blame Ford. Brian Cole had been driving over 80 mph when he drifted off road for unknown reasons, suddenly turned his steering wheel 295 degrees, lost control, and caused the vehicle to roll over more than three times. He was not wearing his safety belt and died after being ejected from the vehicle.

It was the third trial of the Cole case, with the first two resulting in hung juries. Eleven of the 12 jurors in the most recent trial found against Ford, two more than the number required for a verdict.

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