The Hamilton Spectator

Volkswagen fined $1.2B in Germany over diesel engine scandal

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BERLIN — Automaker Volkswagen said Wednesday that it’s being fined 1 billion euros (US$1.18 billion) by German authoritie­s in connection with the diesel emissions scandal.

Volkswagen said in a statement it would accept the fine imposed by prosecutor­s in the German city of Braunschwe­ig.

Prosecutor­s concluded that Volkswagen failed to properly oversee the activity of its engine developmen­t department, resulting in about 10.7 million diesel vehicles with illegal emissionsc­ontrolling software being sold worldwide.

The scandal, which came to light in the United States in 2015, has already cost the German automaker $20 billion in fines and civil settlement­s in the U.S.

Volkswagen said it hoped that paying the German fine would have “positive effects on other official proceeding­s being conducted in Europe against Volkswagen” and its subsidiari­es.

Volkswagen admitted in 2015 to cheating on U.S. emissions tests by equipping diesel cars with software that turned on emissions controls when the vehicles were on test stands, and reduced the controls during normal driving.

Volkswagen CEO Martin Winterkorn was charged in March in the U.S. with wire fraud and conspiring to violate the U.S. Clean Air Act. Two lower-ranking Volkswagen executives have been sentenced to prison in the United States, while five others have been charged, but not apprehende­d.

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