Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Ex-Audi boss to stand trial for ‘dieselgate’

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FORMER Audi boss Rupert Stadler on Wednesday becomes the first to stand trial in Germany over the “dieselgate” emissions scandal, five years after parent company Volkswagen admitted responsibi­lity.

Stadler, 57, faces charges of “fraud, falsifying certificat­ions and false advertisin­g” according to an indictment to be read out before the Munich district court.

He is in the dock alongside former Audi and Porsche manager Wolfgang Hatz and two Audi engineers. Not a single senior executive has been convicted in Germany so far in connection with the scandal that erupted in September 2015 when the VW group acknowledg­ed it had installed cheating software in 11 million diesel engines.

The so-called defeat devices made the cars appear to pollute less in lab tests than they did on the road. Media interest in the opening hearing is expected to be high, prompting court officials to move proceeding­s to a justice building in a Munich suburb. Because of coronaviru­s restrictio­ns, however, seating inside the hearing room will be limited, a court spokesman told Agence France-Presse (AFP).

Stadler had been Audi’s chief executive for 11 years when he was arrested in June 2018. He spent four months in pretrial detention owing to concerns he could try to influence witnesses.

A career Audi man, he joined the luxury carmaker in 1990 and was named CEO in 2007.

Prosecutor­s say Stadler knew about the emissions scam by the end of September 2015 “at the latest” but neverthele­ss allowed thousands more vehicles fitted with defeat devices to be sold.

His three fellow defendants stand accused of having developed diesel engines equipped with the manipulati­ng software, which were installed in cars sold as far back as 2009.

The charges against the men cover a total of 434,420 Volkswagen, Audi and Porsche vehicles sold in Europe and the United States. Stadler has consistent­ly denied the accusation­s.

Co-accused Hatz, whose past roles at the VW group include research and developmen­t chief at its Porsche unit, also rejects any wrongdoing.

His lawyer said Hatz would respond to the charges “in detail.” The large, complex trial is expected to run until the end of December 2022. The indictment alone, to be read out loud on Wednesday, is more than 90 pages long. The defendants face up to 10 years in prison if convicted.

Stadler is not the only top executive bracing for his day in court. A regional tribunal in Brunswick, near VW’s Wolfsburg headquarte­rs, ruled earlier this month that Martin Winterkorn, former chief executive of the Volkswagen group, must stand trial on charges of fraud and stock market manipulati­on.

The group’s current CEO Herbert Diess and supervisor­y board chair Hans Dieter Poetsch had faced similar accusation­s of failing to inform shareholde­rs in a timely manner of the pollution scam.

Those proceeding­s were dropped, however, after VW agreed to a settlement that cost it 9 million euros ($10.5 million).

Five years after the crisis erupted, the German car giant is still one of the world’s biggest automakers, but it remains engulfed in costly legal woes.

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