The Borneo Post

US judge orders VW to pay US$2.8 billion criminal penalty

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CHICAGO: A US judge on Friday sentenced Volkswagen to pay a US$2.8 billion criminal penalty in the diesel emissions cheating scandal, in line with a deal struck between the automaker and the US government.

The district court judge in Detroit also placed the German auto maker on three years of probation, settling the US criminal case over the scandal that has roiled the firm since 2015.

The German automaker has agreed to pay a total of more than US$23 billion in fines and compensati­on in the United States — including penalties to federal and state authoritie­s, as well as consumers and car dealers — in one of the costliest corporate scandals in history.

With Germany conducting its own probe, the final bill could be even higher.

VW in January agreed to plead guilty to three felony charges of defrauding the United States and conspiring to violate the Clean Air Act by installing so-called defeat devices on diesel-powered cars to evade emissions standards.

In addition to the criminal penalty, which it agreed to under the plea agreement, VW will pay a separate US$1.5 billion civil penalty. It also agreed to cooperate with federal investigat­ors.

“The agreements that we have reached with the US government reflect our determinat­ion to address misconduct that went against all of the values Volkswagen holds so dear,” the company said Friday in a statement.

“Volkswagen today is not the same company it was 19 months ago — the change process under way is the biggest in our history.”

Former Deputy Assistant Attorney General Larry Thompson was appointed to monitor the company’s compliance with the terms of the deal.

“This is a case of deliberate massive fraud perpetrate­d by VW management,” Judge Sean Cox said during the sentencing hearing in Detroit.

One aspect of the case that remains unresolved is the fate of VW executive Oliver Schmidt who US authoritie­s arrested in Miami in January, one of seven company employees who have been charged.

Judge Cox refused to release Schmidt on bond, agreeing with prosecutor­s that he risked fleeing to Germany, which does not extradite its citizens.

Five other company officials charged in January are believed to be in Germany. — AFP

 ??  ?? File photo shows an American flag flies next to a Volkswagen car dealership in San Diego, California. — Reuters photo
File photo shows an American flag flies next to a Volkswagen car dealership in San Diego, California. — Reuters photo

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