California

Porsche Responds to Paul Walker Wrongful Death Lawsuit

Porsche has filed a response to Meadow Walker's wrongful death lawsuit.

Less than two months after Paul Walker's daughter alleged that the Porsche Carrera GT he was driving lacked safety features that could have prevented the accident, the car company is defending themselves against several accusations.

In court documents obtained by E! News, Porsche alleges that Walker "knowingly and voluntarily assumed all risk, perils and danger in respect to the use of the subject 2005 Carrera GT." The company stated that the "risk and dangers were open and obvious and known to him and that he chose to conduct himself in a manner so as to expose himself to such perils, dangers and risks, thus assuming all the risks involved in using the vehicle."

Porsche also believed that Meadow is barred from receiving any compensation because her father "was a knowledgeable and sophisticated user of the car."

E! News has reached out to Meadow's attorneys and Porsche for comment.

PHOTOS: Paul Walker's biggest movies

Meadow and her lawyers filed a lawsuit in September alleging that Porsche knew that the specific car in Paul's case "had a history of instability and control issues."

The lawsuit said the company also allegedly "failed to install its electronic stability control system, which is specifically designed to protect against the swerving actions inherent in hyper-sensitive vehicles of this type."

"The bottom line is that the Porsche Carrera GT is a dangerous car," Meadow's lawyer Jeff Milam said in a statement to E! News. "It doesn't belong on the street. And we shouldn't be without Paul Walker or his friend, Roger Rodas."

Porsche alleged in court documents that Paul's car in the accident "was abused and altered" in a manner that was "not reasonably foreseeable to the company." Ultimately, "that abuse and alteration proximately caused or contributed to the incident."

VIDEO: Paul Walker's brother talks Fast &Furious legacy

Back in March 2014, law enforcement ruled that the cause of the crash was speeding at rates between 80 and 93 MPH. The speed limit for the street where the accident took place was 45 MPH.

"Investigators determined the cause of the fatal solo-vehicle collision was unsafe speed for the roadway conditions," Commander Mike Parker explained.

There was also evidence that both Paul and driver Roger Rodas wore seatbelts and that the airbags deployed for both the driver and the passenger.

The "Fast and the Furious" star and his longtime friend died on Nov. 30, 2013 shortly after the actor's charity event in Valencia, California.

Reporting by Baker Machado.

PHOTOS: Paul Walker's life in pictures

Copyright E! Online
Contact Us