Family of Georgia woman killed in Fiesta crash sues Ford over DPS6 transmission problems

Lt. Austin Cody Smith had just finished the night shift at the City of College Park Police Department in Georgia when he was driving home around 6:25 a.m. and noticed traffic on Interstate 85 merging in a way that made no sense to him, according to court records obtained by the Detroit Free Press.

The uniformed officer spotted a 2018 Ford Fiesta stopped in the far left lane, the passing lane. He pulled his Ram 1500 personal pickup truck to the side of the road and yelled for the two occupants to exit the compact car as quickly as possible on that Friday morning, April 26, 2019.

“When I realized what was happening — when I realized it was a car in the lane, I was like, ‘I need to try to help them,'” Smith said in a deposition taken March 16, 2022. “It was dark, and the car was sitting there … A disabled vehicle in the middle of the highway is a dangerous situation.”

The driver quickly exited. Her sister did not get out in time. And Smith watched as a 2016 Chevy Impala slammed into the back of the Fiesta at an estimated 85 mph, sending it into the concrete median.

Smith leaned into the vehicle as Jyotika Ladd, 63, lay motionless. She would never return to her home in Duluth, Georgia. The crash occurred near Newnan, Georgia, about 40 miles southwest of Atlanta.

A 2018 Ford Fiesta lost power on Interstate 85 in Georgia on April 26, 2019. Jyotika Ladd, a wife and mother of two children, died at the scene. A lawsuit was filed against Ford Motor Co., on Feb. 1, 2023 claiming the vehicle had a defective DPS6 transmission that malfunctioned in traffic, lost power and caused it to come to a stop. An off-duty police officer attempted arrived on the scene as another vehicle slammed into the Fiesta.

The Fiesta driver testified that while she was driving, the vehicle started to pull to the left and shut down on its own, coming to a rest in the spot where it was eventually struck, according to court documents filed Feb. 1, 2023, with the State Court of Clayton County.

“That’s something she cannot control, if the car truly had a mechanical malfunction and she could no longer operate it, versus her actually stopping it,” Smith said in his deposition.

The claim: The Fiesta malfunctioned in traffic and lost power, causing it to come to a stop.

Reports of Ford Fiestas and Focuses losing power because of allegedly defective transmissions number in the thousands and have spurred massive litigation. The lawsuit over Ladd’s death, seeking to directly link the defect to a fatality, is unique. The defect was the subject of a wide-ranging Detroit Free Press investigation that began in 2019 and continues to this day involving millions of bestselling vehicles.