Philippine Daily Inquirer

Volkswagen, US Justice Dept discuss settlement, sources say

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WASHINGTON—Volkswagen AG and the US Justice Department have held preliminar­y settlement talks about resolving a criminal probe into the automaker’s diesel emissions scandal, two sources briefed on the matter said.

Reuters reported in June that a criminal settlement could include a consent decree, an independen­t monitor overseeing the German automaker’s conduct and significan­t yet-to-be determined fines for emissions violations.

The Wall Street Journal reported on Monday that the fines could top $1.2 billion.

The pace of VW’s internal investigat­ion together with complicati­ons from separate civil suits filed in July by three US states have slowed progress on reaching a settlement of the criminal investigat­ion, according to people familiar with the probe.

The Justice Department declined to comment.

In June, VW agreed to pay as $15.3 billion after admitting it cheated on US diesel emissions tests for years. The company agreed to buy back vehicles from consumers and provide funding that could benefit makers of cleaner technologi­es.

VW agreed to set aside $10.033 billion to cover buybacks or fixes for 475,000 2.0 liter diesel cars and sport utility vehicles that used illegal software to defeat government emissions tests.

Under the Justice Department deal, VW will spend $2 billion over 10 years to fund programs directed by California and EPA to promote constructi­on of infrastruc­ture to charge electric vehicles, developmen­t of zero-emission ride-sharing fleets and other efforts to boost sales of cars that do not burn petroleum.

VW also agreed to put up $2.7 billion over three years to enable government and tribal agencies to replace old buses or to fund infrastruc­ture to reduce diesel emissions.

VW could face billions of dollars more in costs in the United States if it is forced to buy back 85,000 3.0 liter Audi, Porsche and VW cars and SUVs sold since 2009.

Last month, three US states led by New York filed suits seeking at least hundreds of millions of dollars and said senior executives at Volkswagen including its former chief executive covered up evidence that the German automaker had cheated on US diesel emissions tests for years.

A VW spokesman said the company “is committed to earning back the trust of our customers, dealers, regulators and the American public. As we have said previously, Volkswagen is cooperatin­g with federal and state regulators in the United States, including the Department of Justice, and our discussion­s are continuing toward a resolution of remaining issues.”

The fine to resolve the US criminal investigat­ion could be the largest ever imposed on an automaker, surpassing the $1.2 billion paid by Toyota Motor Corp in 2014 to resolve a Justice Department investigat­ion into its handling of sudden unintended accelerati­on incidents.

In September, General Motors Co paid $900 million and signed a deferred-prosecutio­n agreement to end a Justice Department investigat­ion into its handling of an ignition-switch defect linked to 124 deaths. Both automakers agreed to three years of oversight by an outside monitor.

 ?? AP ?? THE VOLKSWAGEN logo is seen on a car during the Car Show in Frankfurt, Germany.
AP THE VOLKSWAGEN logo is seen on a car during the Car Show in Frankfurt, Germany.

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