Lodi News-Sentinel

Judge gives OK to deal for some VW vehicles

- By Sudhin Thanawala

SAN FRANCISCO — A federal judge in San Francisco granted initial approval Tuesday to a deal worth at least $1.2 billion that aims to compensate the owners of roughly 78,000 Volkswagen­s with 3-liter engines that were rigged to cheat on emissions tests.

The company previously agreed to spend up to $10 billion compensati­ng owners of roughly 475,000 Volkswagen­s and Audi vehicles with 2liter diesel engines — the bulk of the vehicles caught up in Volkswagen’s emissions cheating scandal.

U.S. District Judge Charles Breyer congratula­ted attorneys for Volkswagen and car owners before granting preliminar­y approval to the smaller deal involving Volkswagen­s, Audis and Porsches. He said the settlement was complicate­d and motivated by economic and environmen­tal concerns.

The deal offers thousands of dollars in compensati­on to individual car owners on top of buybacks or repairs.

“This settlement marks an important milestone in Volkswagen’s efforts to make things right in the United States,” said Robert Giuffra, an attorney representi­ng the company.

Owners of 20,000 3-liter models dating back to 2009-2012 that cannot be fixed to meet pollution standards will be offered buybacks or trade-ins. They also will receive compensati­on ranging from $7,755 to $13,880, according to attorneys representi­ng car owners.

People who bought 58,000 newer cars will get compensati­on of $7,039 to $16,114. If VW can’t fix the newer cars to regulators’ satisfacti­on, then the owners’ attorneys are expected to go back to court to seek buybacks. That could push the value of the deal for the 3-liter engines up to $4 billion.

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