Chattanooga Times Free Press

Prosecutor­s charge former Audi head

- BY DAVID MCHUGH

FRANKFURT, Germany — German prosecutor­s have charged the former head of Audi, Volkswagen’s luxury division, with fraud in connection with the sale of cars with software that enabled cheating on emissions tests, adding another chapter to VW’s diesel scandal that has seen its former CEO charged in the U.S. and two executives go to prison there.

Prosecutor­s in Munich said Wednesday in a news release that they had charged Rupert Stadler and three other individual­s. The three unnamed individual­s were charged with having developed engines used in Audi, Volkswagen and Porsche models that had software that made the emissions controls work better on the test stand than in real-life driving.

Stadler was charged with having known about the manipulati­on in Audi and Volkswagen cars and with continuing to sell the models despite that knowledge. Prosecutor­s said he found out about the impermissi­ble software at the end of September 2015, at the latest, when the Volkswagen scandal broke, but continued permitting rigged cars to be sold.

In Stadler’s case, the accusation­s related to 251,000 Audi vehicles, 71,500 Volkswagen cars, and 112,000 Porsches, sold in the U.S. and Europe.

Volkswagen was caught by U.S. authoritie­s in September 2015, and paid more than $33.5 billion in fines and civil settlement­s. Former VW group CEO Martin Winterkorn is facing criminal charges in the U.S.

but cannot be extradited, while two other executives have been sentenced to prison terms.

Stadler, 56, was held for four months in pre-trial detention last year before being released under conditions.

Audi said in a statement Wednesday that “the presumptio­n of innocence continues to apply to all defendants until the allegation­s have been clarified.”

The company said it was cooperatin­g with the investigat­ing authoritie­s and added that “it is in the interests of the employees, the shareholde­rs and the entire company to reach full legal clarificat­ion of the issues that led to the diesel crisis. … This clarificat­ion is the prerequisi­te for the successful new start.”

 ?? AP FILE PHOTO/MICHAEL SOHN ?? Rupert Stadler, then-CEO of Audi AG, attends the shareholde­rs’ meeting of the Volkswagen stock company in Berlin, Germany.
AP FILE PHOTO/MICHAEL SOHN Rupert Stadler, then-CEO of Audi AG, attends the shareholde­rs’ meeting of the Volkswagen stock company in Berlin, Germany.

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