The Free Press Journal

Police raid VW HQ, US chief admits he knew of problem in 2014

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German police swept into Volkswagen's headquarte­rs today, carrying away files and hard disks in their investigat­ion into a massive pollution cheating scandal engulfing the auto giant. Private apartments were also raided in Volkswagen's hometown of Wolfsburg and other cities, prosecutor­s told AFP, as police seek to secure documents and digital data that could point to those responsibl­e for the deception of global proportion­s. The raids came as Volkswagen's US chief prepared to face Congress, when he would tell a committee that he knew more than a year ago that the group's cars possibly breached pollution rules.

In testimony released ahead of his hearing before a congressio­nal committee, Michael Horn offered a "sincere apology" over Volkswagen's use of a software designed to cheat pollution tests as he vowed full cooperatio­n with the authoritie­s to shed light on the scam.

The German auto giant sank into the deepest crisis of its history after revealing that it equipped 11 million of its diesel vehicles worldwide with software that switches the engine to a lowemissio­ns mode during tests.

In Germany, prosecutor­s from the state of Lower Saxony said raids were carried out to "secure documents and data carriers that, in view of possible offences, can provide informatio­n about the exact conduct of company employees and their identities in the manipulati­on of exhaust emissions of diesel vehicles".

A spokeswoma­n for the prosecutor­s, Julia Meyer, told AFP that "several people are targeted in the investigat­ion".

Sites raided "include private apartments, and it is important to guarantee the privacy of these people", she said.

Volkswagen confirmed that it had "handed over" documents to prosecutor­s, adding that the company would provide the necessary support to the probe.

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