The survey turned up defective airbags, faulty ignition switches and other potentially deadly problems. One of every nine used vehicles had an unaddressed safety recall, according to the examination of more than 2,400 for-sale listings at dealerships under the umbrella of AutoNation.
The Fort Lauderdale, Florida, company bills itself as "America's Largest Auto Retailer," with 360 franchises in 16 states. The survey reviewed listings at 28 AutoNation locations in 16 metro areas, including Chicago.
Of 2,429 vehicles surveyed, 285 had unrepaired recalls including 10 vehicles at AutoNation locations in Des Plaines and Libertyville. And 14 used cars that were labeled "certified" were still found to have open safety recalls.
The review was done in July and August by the U.S. Public Interest Research Group's Education Fund, Consumers for Auto Reliability and Safety Foundation and the Frontier Group.
The findings mirror a Chicago Sun-Times investigation in February that found used cars being offered for sale in the Chicago area despite open recalls for safety problems including faulty airbags, sudden acceleration, detaching sunroofs and defective ignition switches.
An AutoNation spokesman said "the suggestion ... that AutoNation is knowingly or deliberately seeking to mislead consumers is entirely unfounded."
There's no federal law requiring dealers to fix recalls before selling vehicles.
Since 1966, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration has issued recalls for more than 390 million vehicles because of safety concerns. Carfax, the vehicle-history service, estimates that more than 57 million vehicles on the road today have open, unaddressed recalls.
In 2015, AutoNation said it would stop selling used cars with open recalls. But the company rescinded that promise a year and a half later, saying it had struggled to find enough parts to address the massive Takata airbag recall.
Marc Cannon, executive vice president of AutoNation, said "the overwhelming majority" of the company's used vehicles facing recalls are fixed before they are offered for sale. Cannon said salespeople are trained to tell customers about open recalls, including letting them know when parts are unavailable.
But Cannon said that, even if people are offered another car, "overwhelmingly, the customer will say, 'No, I want this vehicle.' "
CarMax also doesn't require safety recalls to be addressed before its cars are sold, though it says its salespeople are required to check for recalls and share that information with customers so they can go to an authorized dealer, where repairs will be made for free.