Houston Chronicle

VW engineer gets prison, $200,000 fine in scandal

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DETROIT — A Volkswagen engineer who had a key role in the company’s diesel emissions scandal was sentenced Friday to more than three years in prison and a $200,000 fine, a steeper punishment than prosecutor­s requested.

James Robert Liang, 63, a German citizen, knew the German automaker was cheating and worked to cover it up, U.S. District Court Judge Sean Cox said during the sentencing hearing in Detroit. The judge imposed a 40-month prison sentence.

“The conspiracy perpetrate­d a massive ... and stunning fraud on the American consumer that attacked and destroyed the very foundation of our economic system,” Cox said.

Liang, who faces deportatio­n to Germany upon his release, declined to speak on his own behalf. Prosecutor­s had requested a 36-month prison term and a $20,000 fine.

Prosecutor­s said Liang was

aware that VW used software to cheat U.S. emission rules on nearly 600,000 diesel vehicles. His lawyer said he’s not “greedy or immoral” but followed orders to keep his job and support his family.

“What occurred here was wrong,” defense attorney Daniel Nixon said. “But he wasn’t the mastermind. He was not motivated by greed.”

Liang pleaded guilty last year to one count of conspiracy to defraud the government and agreed to cooperate with investigat­ors. Liang had asked the judge to consider a sentence of probation and 1,500 hours of community service.

He is one of two VW employees to plead guilty. Earlier this month, Oliver Schmidt, 48, a former manager of a VW engineerin­g

office in suburban Detroit, pleaded guilty to conspiracy and fraud charges related to the scandal. He is scheduled to be sentenced Dec. 6.

VW itself pleaded guilty in March to defrauding the U.S. government and agreed to pay $4.3 billion in penalties, on top of billions more to buy back cars.

Others charged in the case are in Germany and out of reach.

Volkswagen and U.S. environmen­tal regulators announced agreement last month on a plan for the automaker to fix most of the diesel cars involved in the emissions cheating scandal.

 ?? Virginia Lozano / Detroit News file ?? Volkswagen engineer James Robert Liang, left, leaves court in Detroit in 2016. He was sentenced to prison on Friday.
Virginia Lozano / Detroit News file Volkswagen engineer James Robert Liang, left, leaves court in Detroit in 2016. He was sentenced to prison on Friday.

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