Chattanooga Times Free Press

U.S. sues Volkswagen over diesel cheating

EPA says vehicles polluted at 40 times the legal limit

- BY MICHAEL BIESECKER AND ERIC TUCKER

WASHINGTON — The Justice Department sued Volkswagen on Monday over emissions- cheating software found in nearly 600,000 vehicles sold in the United States, potentiall­y exposing the company to billions of dollars in penalties for clean air violations.

The civil complaint against the German automaker, filed on behalf of the Environmen­tal Protection Agency in U.S. District Court in Detroit, alleges the company illegally installed software designed to make its “clean diesel” engines pass federal emissions standards while undergoing laboratory testing. The vehicles then switched off those measures in real-world driving conditions, spewing harmful gases at up to 40 times what is allowed under federal environmen­tal standards.

“Car manufactur­ers that fail to properly certify their cars and that defeat emission control systems breach the

“So far, recall discussion­s with the company have not produced an acceptable way forward.”

– CYNTHIA GILES, EPA

public trust, endanger public health and disadvanta­ge competitor­s,” John C. Cruden, the assistant attorney general for the Justice Department’s Environmen­t and Natural Resources Division, said in a statement.

“The United States will pursue all appropriat­e remedies against Volkswagen to redress the violations of our nation’s clean air laws alleged in the complaint,” he said.

Volkswagen’s Chattanoog­a operations, which produces the midsize Passat sedan, is named some 18 times in the suit. The suit said the Chattanoog­a facility, which is VW’s only assembly site in the U. S., interacts with the automaker’s Auburn Hills, Mich., office. That’s where VW has an engineerin­g and environmen­tal office, according to the suit.

The company is in the midst of negotiatin­g a massive mandatory recall with U. S. regulators and potentiall­y faces more than $ 18 billion in fines for violations of the federal Clean Air Act.

The company and its executives could also still face separate criminal charges, while a raft of private class-action lawsuits filed by angry VW owners are pending.

Volkswagen Group of America spokeswoma­n Jeannine Ginivan said Monday that the company “will continue to cooperate with all government agencies investigat­ing these matters.”

In past statements, high- ranking VW executives have sought to blame only a small number of software developers in Germany for the suspect computer code designed to trick emissions tests. The company has hired a U.S.based law firm to conduct an internal investigat­ion into the scheme. The findings of that review have not yet been made public.

The company first acknowledg­ed in September that the cheating software was included in its diesel cars and SUVs sold since the 2009 model year, as well as some recent diesel models sold by the VW-owned Audi and Porsche brands. Worldwide, the company says cheating software was included in more than 11 million vehicles.

The federal lawsuit alleges Volkswagen intentiona­lly tampered with the vehicles sold in the U.S. to include what regulators call a “defeat device,” a mechanism specifical­ly designed to game emissions tests. Under the law, automakers are required to disclose any such devices to regulators.

Because Volkswagen kept its suspect software secret, the lawsuit alleges the company’s cars were sold without a valid “certificat­e of conformity” issued by EPA to regulate new cars manufactur­ed or imported into the country.

In addition to producing far more pollution than allowed, experts say the excess nitrogen oxide and particulat­e emissions from the more than half-million VW vehicles had a human cost. A statistica­l and computer analysis by the Associated Press estimated the extra pollution caused somewhere between 16 and 94 deaths over the last seven years, with the annual toll increasing as more of the diesels were on the road.

“With today’s filing, we take an important step to protect public health by seeking to hold Volkswagen accountabl­e for any unlawful air pollution, setting us on a path to resolution,” said Assistant Administra­tor Cynthia Giles for EPA’s Office of Enforcemen­t and Compliance Assurance. “So far, recall discussion­s with the company have not produced an acceptable way forward. These discussion­s will continue in parallel with the federal court action.”

Justice Department officials said on Monday the case was filed in the Eastern District of Michigan because that is where “significan­t activity” related to the company’s cheating scheme occurred. EPA’s primary emissions- testing lab is located in Ann Arbor and Volkswagen also has facilities in the Detroit metro area.

However, as the legal case proceeds, the venue is expected to move to Northern California, where hundreds of the class- action cases have been consolidat­ed and state regulators played a key role in uncovering VW’s deceptions.

Tennessee Gov. Bill Haslam said Monday he received a heads-up from EPA Administra­tor Gina McCarthy about the suit.

“I think it was their intent to get ahead of other things that might be filed in the case. It’s our interest to have Volkswagen keep producing vehicles and employing people down there [ in Chattanoog­a],” he said.

Haslam said he has had several conversati­ons with VW officials from Germany and stressed to them that they “address all these issues head-on as quickly as possible.”

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Michael Horn, left, president and CEO of Volkswagen Group of America, talks to journalist­s in November at the Los Angeles Auto Show.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Michael Horn, left, president and CEO of Volkswagen Group of America, talks to journalist­s in November at the Los Angeles Auto Show.

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