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VW ex-boss denies prior knowledge of pollution cheating
By Christina NEUHAUS
Berlin (AFP) Jan 19, 2017


Poland launches 'dieselgate' case against Volkswagen
Warsaw (AFP) Jan 19, 2017 - Poland on Thursday launched legal action against Volkswagen Group Polska in connection with the emissions-cheating scandal involving its diesel cars.

The Polish UOKiK competition and consumer protection office said the group risked "a fine in the amount of up to ten percent" of its turnover in Poland for having misled consumers.

But the office also said in a statement published on its website that it could "refrain from imposing a fine" should VW commit to taking "steps to remedy the effects of the infringement which have a detrimental effect on consumers."

The German-owned auto giant admitted last year it had installed software on as many as 11 million diesel vehicles sold worldwide to circumvent tests for emissions while enabling them to release up to 40 times the permitted amounts of nitrogen oxides during actual driving.

Volkswagen sold around 200,000 emissions-cheating vehicles in Poland, according to the Polish StopVW association that launched civil legal action against the group last year.

According to the manufacturer, the number is 140,000.

VW looks set to pay $4.3 billion (4.1 billion euros) to settle a US criminal case. The company already settled civil charges there in the scandal, agreeing to pay $14.7 billion in an agreement that permits owners of nearly a half million 2.0-liter diesel vehicles to either sell them back or get them fixed.

Former Volkswagen boss Martin Winterkorn said Thursday that he did not know the beleaguered German auto giant was engaging in systematic emissions cheating until shortly before the scam broke.

Winterkorn told a parliamentary committee into the "dieselgate" scandal that "total clarity was and is the order of the day", and that he was still trying to understand how the scandal could have happened.

The 69-year-old resigned in September 2015, days after the VW group admitted it had installed software in 11 million diesel vehicles worldwide to dupe emissions tests and make the cars seem less polluting than they were.

A fastidious perfectionist with the nickname "Mr Quality", Winterkorn had once boasted jokingly in an interview: "I know every screw in our cars."

But the former chief executive said he knew nothing of the pollution cheating scam until just before the scandal broke at the end of August, a point he reiterated Thursday.

"I cannot understand why I was not told about the problems with (emission) measurements clearly and early," he said, adding that he "never had the impression that people felt they could not speak openly with me."

German lawmakers are seeking to establish when the VW board and the government were first informed of the cheating.

The issue has a particular bearing in Germany where investigators have placed Winterkorn under probe and are examining if fraud was committed in the sales of vehicles with manipulated emission values.

In addition, prosecutors are investigating whether management divulged the existence of the scandal later than they were legally obliged to under stock market rules, thereby essentially manipulating stock prices.

- 'Authorised concealment' -

US investigators in recent weeks revealed that they believe VW top brass were aware of the cheating as far back as July 2015.

Their timeline appeared to square with that claimed in German media reports.

But asked directly if the media reports were true, Winterkorn said: "That is not the case."

According to the FBI, Volkswagen employees in July 2015 briefed senior executives at German headquarters on the defeat device, telling them that regulators were not aware of the mechanism.

"Rather than advocate for disclosure of the defeat device to US regulators, VW executive management authorised its continued concealment," the FBI said.

Volkswagen has agreed to plead guilty to conspiracy to defraud the United States as well as to obstruction of justice for destroying documents related to the scheme.

As part of the deal, it has also agreed to pay $4.3 billion (four billion euros) in civil and criminal fines.

But in the final settlement running to 86 pages, the group does not clarify who in the group is responsible for the scam.

Some 1,400 shareholders are also suing in Germany for damages worth a total 8 billion euros after the announcement of the scam wiped out some 40 percent of VW's market capitalisation in days.

VW sank into the red for the first time in more than 20 years in 2015 when it booked a loss of 1.6 billion euros due to the provisions it was forced to set aside over the scandal.

- 'Something illegal' -

The group has not budged on its timeline of events -- saying that top management was informed about the scandal only at "the end of August, early September 2015".

But on Sunday, German daily Bild said that during a meeting organised by VW management on July 27, 2015 and attended by Winterkorn, a participant raised "the fact that something illegal had been installed in our vehicles".

The participant then asked what strategy the group should adopt vis-a-vis the information, reported the daily.

Meanwhile, Sueddeutsche Zeitung and regional broadcasters WDR and NDR reported that two witnesses had told US authorities that they had raised the issue directly with Winterkorn as early as 2012 and 2014.

The parliamentary committee is also trying to determine whether government officials were aware of the scandal before it became public knowledge.

Vice-Chancellor Sigmar Gabriel has already appeared before the panel, while Chancellor Angela Merkel is to be questioned on March 8.

cne-hmn/fz/jh

VOLKSWAGEN


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Previous Report
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German MPs to grill VW ex-boss over 'Dieselgate'
Berlin (AFP) Jan 18, 2017
Disgraced former Volkswagen boss Martin Winterkorn faces a grilling by German lawmakers Thursday, as accusations grow of top executives at the beleaguered auto giant colluding to cover up emissions cheating. The former CEO's testimony will be "particularly important" in light of the latest allegations against the VW group, said Herbert Behrens, who heads a special parliamentary committee inv ... read more


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