Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Post-scandal fixes called slow at VW

- JACK EWING

WOLFSBURG, Germany — Nearly three years after Volkswagen admitted to a vast emissions cheating scheme, the company has only just begun to take steps necessary to prevent future scandals, according to a report by a prominent U.S. lawyer appointed to monitor the company’s behavior.

Among other things, Volkswagen still has work to do to create an adequate whistleblo­wer program, the lawyer, Larry D. Thompson, wrote in the report.

In interviews before the report was issued Monday, Thompson said it was intended not as a criticism of the company but rather as recommenda­tions for future action.

“My mandate is a forward-looking one,” he said in Wolfsburg, Volkswagen’s base.

Still, the implicatio­n was that Volkswagen has made insufficie­nt progress toward repairing the shortcomin­gs in company culture and internal controls that led to the scandal.

“It is not easy to come from shock to shame to change,” Hiltrud D. Werner, a member of Volkswagen’s board responsibl­e for integrity, said at a news conference Monday.

But she said the company had made more progress than it might appear. “There is a lot that might not have been seen from the outside, but the effort from inside is really tremendous,” she said.

Volkswagen has admitted programmin­g millions of diesel cars to deliver acceptable emissions data only when engine software detected that they were being tested. At other times they polluted far above legal limits. After Volkswagen pleaded guilty in a U.S. court to charges that included conspiracy to violate the Clean Air Act, a federal judge appointed Thompson — who had been deputy attorney general under President George W. Bush — to monitor whether Volkswagen is keeping promises it made as part of its plea deal and when it settled civil cases.

The report released Monday, which dealt solely with the company’s compliance with the civil settlement­s, also underscore­d how much Volkswagen continues to struggle with the consequenc­es of the scandal, which came to light in September 2015. In a report in April that dealt with the criminal charges, Thompson faulted the company for failing to hold executives accountabl­e and moving too slowly to remake the corporate culture.

“The wrongful acts and crimes that were committed in the United States were enormous,” Thompson said. “The cultural change is going to be enormous, and it’s going to require lots of work on the part of the company.”

Despite promises to become more ethical, top management was until recently dominated by longtime insiders who often seemed to be in denial.

Even after pleading guilty, Volkswagen insisted that the wrongdoing was the work of lower-level managers and engineers and that top executives were not involved.

That assertion became more difficult to defend in May after federal prosecutor­s indicted Martin Winterkorn, the former chief executive of Volkswagen, on charges that included conspiracy to defraud the government. Winterkorn has denied the charges.

Then, in June, Munich prosecutor­s arrested Rupert Stadler, the head of the Audi division and a member of Volkswagen’s management board, on suspicion of taking part in the fraud.

Stadler is being held without bail, a sign that a judge has decided he might obstruct the investigat­ion if he were free. Neverthele­ss, Volkswagen has not fired Stadler, and in theory he could get his old job back if he manages to win release.

Thompson declined to comment directly on Volkswagen’s decision to stand by an executive who is in jail. But he said, “In my experience, one of the cornerston­es of any effective ethics and compliance effort is the organizati­on’s willingnes­s to hold itself and its executives, especially top executives, accountabl­e for wrongdoing.”

If at the end of this threeyear term Thompson concludes that Volkswagen has not done enough to avert future wrongdoing and create a stronger sense of ethics, the company might land back in U.S. courts. In the worst case, the Justice Department might accuse Volkswagen of violating the plea agreement and force the company to renegotiat­e the terms.

Volkswagen has generally cooperated with Thompson’s team, he said, and accepted the recommenda­tions in his report. But the company has sometimes resisted turning over documents, a point he noted in his report.

Thompson’s report identified two relatively minor violations by Volkswagen of the settlement terms. In one case Volkswagen neglected to put required compliance informatio­n into a handbook for managers in the United States, and in another Volkswagen failed to notify California regulators of impending emissions tests, as required.

Volkswagen reported the violations itself. Werner said they were simply oversights.

Volkswagen pleaded guilty last year to federal charges that included obstructio­n of justice and conspiracy to violate the Clean Air Act. The company admitted that it had rigged nearly 600,000 Volkswagen and Audi vehicles sold in the United States to conceal excess emissions.

Worldwide, 11 million vehicles contained illegal software that could detect when cars were undergoing emissions tests. During those tests, the software turned up pollution controls to be compliant with U.S. regulation­s. At other times, the cars spewed nitrogen oxides — which cause smog and asthma and are regarded as a carcinogen — in amounts far above legal limits.

Under the terms of the settlement­s Volkswagen is supposed to be overhaulin­g its internal controls to avert future wrongdoing, for example by making sure that all engine software is scrutinize­d by someone not involved in the design.

The company also agreed to establish a whistleblo­wer system that would allow employees to report unethical behavior. Volkswagen has such a program, but it was not approved by top management of the Audi division and Volkswagen’s U.S. unit until last autumn. Thompson’s report indicated that the company has more work to do to ensure that the whistleblo­wer program is effective.

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