Oman Daily Observer

VW ‘contests’ report boss knew of diesel cheating risk

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FRANKFURT AM MAIN: German carmaker Volkswagen rejected a report that chief executive Herbert Diess knew of the financial risks from the firm’s massive diesel cheating earlier than he has so far acknowledg­ed.

Oliver Schmidt, a former VW manager jailed in the US over dieselgate, told the FBI he had briefed Diess and other executives about the cheating and the potential financial consequenc­es on August 25, 2015, German weekly Bild am Sonntag (Bams) reported.

That was almost one month before the group’s public admission on September 18 that it installed “defeat devices” — shorthand for a physical or software system that makes a vehicle appear less polluting under test conditions compared with real on-road driving — into 11 million cars worldwide. There have been conflictin­g reports in German and internatio­nal media about which executives knew what and when in the hectic final weeks before Volkswagen came clean about diesel cheating.

A clear timeline is vital to legal cases in which shareholde­rs are trying to claw back cash they lost when the group’s share price slumped in the days after the scandal broke, as board members have a duty to inform investors of potential financial harm to their company in a timely fashion.

A Volkswagen spokesman on Sunday highlighte­d its defence in a 9.0-billion-euro ($10.8 billion) German legal case brought by shareholde­rs, in which it “contests” Schmidt’s claim to have briefed thenchief executive Martin Winterkorn, Diess and others about looming fines of $18.5 billion on August 25.

“In this meeting, the threat of imminent or concrete fines... was not discussed,” the document reads.

“Insofar as Mr Schmidt is supposed to have mentioned the legal maximum punishment­s, he did not say that concrete fines of this amount should be expected,” it adds, saying executives still hoped at the time to find a “consensual solution” with US authoritie­s. Diesel cheating by the world’s largest carmaker has so far cost it more than 25 billion euros in buybacks, fines and compensati­on.

 ??  ?? Volkswagen’s newly-appointed CEO Herbert Diess aims to drive automaker out from the cloud of the ‘dieselgate’ scandal. — AFP
Volkswagen’s newly-appointed CEO Herbert Diess aims to drive automaker out from the cloud of the ‘dieselgate’ scandal. — AFP

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