The crash risk of a teenage driver does not decrease with more passengers. In fact it increases due to the increased likelihood that the driver gets distracted.
4
drivers
To protect driver and/or passenger from going through windshield in the event of a front end crash
It would depend upon the circumstances. If the passenger is a fully functioning adult, then yes, it would likely be the passenger's fault. If, however, the passenger was under the charge of the adult driver (such as a young child, or an adult with diminished mental capacity), then it could be argued that the driver created the circumstances in which the crash was liable to occur by placing the passenger in the front seat, and the driver could therefore be found to be at least partially at fault.
Actually, Paul Walker was the passenger in the crash that claimed his life as well as driver Roger Rodas. They were in Rodas' Porsche Carrera GT when it went out of control and hit a lamppost and trees. An investigation later determined that high speed was the lone cause of the crash.
My Life as a Teenage Robot - 2003 A Pain in My Sidekick Crash Pad Crash 2-8 was released on: USA: 23 June 2005
car crash
In a crash, rear seat passengers in a car
which rating are you referring to? The safety rating? As far as U.S Government Crash standards go Frontal Crash - Driver (5 stars) Passenger (5 Stars) Side Crash Front & Rear Seats (5 Stars) Rollover (3 Stars)
Because the driver was a pineapple
NO, males are more likely to be involved in a vehicle crash (as a driver, rather than passenger), than women. Women do not have excesses of testosterone. Hence the popularity of female-only insurance companys, such as "Shelia's Wheels".
her and her driver (do not know the name of driver)