Deaths of Two Boys Spark Renewed Call for GM Trunk Releases

Prompted by the deaths of two Indiana boys who were trapped in the hot trunk of a 2000 Chevy Malibu, an activist group is renewing its demand that General Motors recall its 2000 and 2001 models to install internal trunk releases.

KidsAndCars.org says the June 17 deaths of Isaac Dunner, 2, and Dominick Wilk, 4, in New Carlisle, Ind., followed similar tragedies, including the 2009 deaths of two Arkansas children in the trunk of a 2000 Malibu. The safety organization said it had asked GM at that time to issue a voluntary recall and install internal trunk releases.

As The New York Times reports, Janette Fennell, founder and president of KidsAndCars.org, said GM was singled out because it had vowed to be a leader in addressing the issue after 11 children died in the trunks of GM cars in 1998.

“Then they did nothing,” Fennell told The Times. “When Ford introduced a simple, glow-in-the-dark internal trunk release in 1999, GM was dismissive of the technology.”

Ford Motor Company installed release pulls in every model by the year 2000, two years before the government made internal glow-in-the-dark trunk releases mandatory. Fennell said that, to her knowledge, there has not been a single death in the trunk of a car equipped with the latch.

“Now think about this, if those children had been in the trunk of a Ford vehicle, they would probably be alive today,” Fennell told WNDU, an NBC affiliate in Indiana.

General Motors still charges its customers to install safety pulls in their older cars.

Sharon Basel, a GM spokeswoman, responded to the group’s demand with a prepared statement. “Our thoughts and prayers are with the Indiana boys’ family and we are deeply saddened by their loss,” it read.

KidsAndCars.org recommends that an interior trunk release be installed in all cars that don’t have them. Other safety tips from the group include keeping vehicles locked at all times, storing remote openers and keys where kids can’t reach them, checking vehicle trunks immediately any time a child is missing, teaching children that trunks are not safe places to play and making sure that children are never left alone in or around cars.

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3 comments to “Deaths of Two Boys Spark Renewed Call for GM Trunk Releases”

  1. Amber

    Thank you very much for the nice article. From 1992-present, at least 46 children died after becoming trapped in the trunk of a vehicle without an internal trunk release. 21 of those children died in the trunks of GM vehicles.
    For those of you who have a vehicle that does NOT have an internal trunk release, you can purchase one on the KidsAndCars.org website for only $9.99. They are quick and easy to install and a small price to pay to ensure the safety of your vehicle.
    KidsAndCars.org’s online store is at: http://kidsandcars.org/online-store.html
    Thanks!

  2. Dad

    Or you can teach your kids not to play in the trunk of a car.

  3. Isaac

    I am Isaac Dunner Sr. and those were my kids they were two of the best and smartest kids in the world and too that person that said teach your kids not to play in a trunk you can’t teach kids not to be kids and if you had the balls to say something like to my face I WOULD LAY YOU FLAT OUT!!!!!

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