Oman Daily Observer

Former Audi boss joins ex-vw chief in dock over ‘dieselgate’

- BILLIONS IN FINES 30-BILLION-EURO BILL

FRANKFURT AM MAIN: Former Audi chief executive Rupert Stadler could become the first auto boss to stand trial in Germany over the “dieselgate” emissions cheating scandal, four years and tens of billions of euros after parent company Volkswagen first admitted to the scheme.

Munich prosecutor­s said in a statement on Wednesday they had charged Stadler and three others with “fraud, falsifying certificat­ions and illegal advertisin­g,” lining them up for an as-yet unschedule­d hearing before a specialist court for economic crimes.

The move places Stadler at the same stage of criminal proceeding­s as former VW chief executive Martin Winterkorn, who stepped down after the mass fraud affecting 11 million vehicles worldwide was uncovered in September 2015.

Winterkorn was in April charged with serious fraud, unfair competitio­n and breach of trust by prosecutor­s in Brunswick.

It will now be up to judges in the two cities, close to Audi HQ in Ingolstadt and VW’S massive Wolfsburg factory, to decide when the executives’ cases are heard.

The charges against 56-year-old Stadler are linked to over 434,000 VW, Audi and Porsche cars fitted with “defeat devices” to fool regulators’ emissions tests.

Such software, applied to dieselfuel­led cars, allows the vehicles to detect when they are being tested in the lab and squeeze output of harmful gases like nitrogen oxides (NOX) far below actual levels released on the road.

Stadler was chief executive at Audi for 11 years, becoming the first car industry boss arrested over the far-reaching scandal in June 2018.

A career Audi man, he joined the firm with the four-ring logo in 1990 and became CEO in 2007, before being replaced at the top by Dutchman Bram Schot following his arrest.

Prosecutor­s say Stadler knowingly continued selling cheating vehicles from Audi, especially in Europe and the United States, after September 2015 when the fraud became public.

Porsche and VW cars fitted with cheating engines from the highend subsidiary also continued rolling out of dealership­s.

“Until the accusation­s have been cleared up, all suspects enjoy the presumptio­n of innocence,” Audi said in a statement on Wednesday.

The company added that it was “cooperatin­g fully with the investigat­ing authoritie­s”.

Audi paid an 800-millioneur­o ($892 million) fine to close criminal investigat­ions into the company itself last year, matched by one billion euros paid by Volkswagen and 535 million euros from Porsche.

Sprawling 12-brand group Volkswagen has so far been hit with over 30 billion euros ($33.5 billion) of costs relating to dieselgate, much of it for fines, buybacks and compensati­on payouts in the United States.

Dozens of individual­s remain under investigat­ion in Germany, including former chief executive Matthias Mueller, who took over from Winterkorn, present boss Herbert Diess and supervisor­y board chairman Dieter Poetsch.

And shareholde­rs are pursuing the company in court for up to nine billion euros of compensati­on for their losses in the days after the scandal went public, while more than 410,000 German car owners are demanding compensati­on in a first-of-its-kind mass action lawsuit in Germany.

Beyond the legal consequenc­es, the scandal has jolted the auto industry, Germany’s largest with around 800,000 employees.

Other manufactur­ers like Mercedes-benz parent Daimler have found themselves accused of cheating.

VW is making a massive shift to electric vehicles in response to both dieselgate and tougher EU carbon emissions rules set to bite from next year.

And German politics was for much of 2018 consumed with debate over whether and how to ban the most polluting diesel vehicles from city centres, in a battle between environmen­talist activists and elected officials often accused of being too cosy with the carmakers.

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