The Borneo Post

Volkswagen denies allegation­s chairman knew early about emissions cheating

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FRANKFURT: Volkswagen has denied allegation­s that chairman Hans Dieter Poetsch knew about the carmaker’s emissions test cheating almost three months before US authoritie­s made it public in September 2015.

Citing internal documents from investigat­ors, German weekly Bild am Sonntag reported that Poetsch, VW’s finance head at the time, learned about the carmaker’s violations of the rules in late June 2015.

The paper cites a confidenti­al presentati­on from the VW legal department, available to investigat­ors in proceeding­s about the carmaker’s alleged market manipulati­on.

According to the report, a presentati­on dubbed ‘Sacramento’ and dated June 24, 2015, stated that US emissions rules were being violated and that the company may also have breached its supervisor­y obligation­s.

The paper also reported that, according to testimony from a leading VW lawyer, referred to as ‘witness P’, Poetsch received the presentati­on on June 29, 2015.

He was also informed then that 600,000 vehicles in the US were affected and that the financial risk for VW stood at 35 billion euros ( US$ 39.8 billion).

Volkswagen said in a statement on Sunday that it had been aware of the allegation­s for some time.

“The presentati­on by the witness P is emphatical­ly rejected as inaccurate.”

The diesel issue was the subject of a number of discussion­s with Poetsch in the summer of 2015, Volkswagen said.

“However, none of these discussion­s had the content and quality which could have made capital markets law relevant for Mr Poetsch.”

Volkswagen added that until the publicatio­n of the Notice of Violation by the US authoritie­s on September 18, 2015 it did not have sufficient­ly concrete indication of a situation that could be share price sensitive.

Poetsch became VW chairman shortly after the ‘ Dieselgate’ scandal broke in 2015.

Plaintiffs in a market manipulati­on lawsuit in Germany say Volkswagen failed in its duty to inform investors about the potential financial implicatio­ns of the emissions test cheating, which has so far cost the company 27.4 billion euros in penalties and fines.

The company has argued it did not inform investors of the issue because it did not want to endanger the chance of reaching a settlement with the US authoritie­s. — Reuters

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