This aroused public interest and led to the passage of the National Traffic and Motor Vehicle Safety Act in 1966. In an attempt to discredit Nader, General Motors hired private investigators to expose any embarrassing details of his personal life, particularly his sex life, but GM failed to discredit Nader. In 1970, an invasion-of-privacy lawsuit was filed against General Motors and this ended in GM paying an out-of-court settlement of $425,000 and publicly apologizing before a nationally televised Senate committee
This aroused public interest and led to the passage of the National Traffic and Motor Vehicle Safety Act in 1966. In an attempt to discredit Nader, General Motors hired private investigators to expose any embarrassing details of his personal life, particularly his sex life, but GM failed to discredit Nader. In 1970, an invasion-of-privacy lawsuit was filed against General Motors and this ended in GM paying an out-of-court settlement of $425,000 and publicly apologizing before a nationally televised Senate committee