Chattanooga Times Free Press

VW executive knew of emissions cheating

- BY TOM KRISHER AND DAVID MCHUGH

DETROIT — A federal grand jury in Detroit has indicted former Volkswagen CEO Martin Winterkorn on charges stemming from the company’s diesel emissions cheating scandal in a plot that prosecutor­s allege reached the top of the world’s largest automaker.

The four-count indictment unsealed Thursday charges Winterkorn, 70, with three counts of wire fraud and one of conspiring with other senior VW executives and employees to violate the Clean Air Act. He was indicted in March.

Volkswagen has admitted to programmin­g its diesel engines to activate pollution controls when being tested in government labs and turning them off when on the road.

Winterkorn faces up to five years in prison and a $250,000 fine on the conspiracy charge and up to 20 years in prison and a $25,000 fine on the wire fraud charges. He is the ninth person charged by U.S. authoritie­s in the case. Two have pleaded guilty and are serving jail time, while six others remain in Germany.

“Volkswagen deceived American regulators and defrauded American consumers for years,” Matthew Schneider, the U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Michigan, said in a statement. “The fact that this criminal conduct was allegedly blessed at Volkswagen’s highest levels is appalling.”

The U.S. government believes Winterkorn is in Germany, so it’s unlikely he’ll ever see a U.S. courtroom or jail. Germany’s constituti­on forbids extraditio­n of its citizens other than to another European Union member state or to an internatio­nal court.

He still could be charged in Germany, however. Prosecutor­s in the city of Braunschwe­ig said in January 2017 that Winterkorn was among 37 suspects being investigat­ed in a criminal probe related to the emissions scandal. Prosecutor­s’ statement said they were investigat­ing him on suspicion of fraud and false advertisin­g.

Winterkorn testified in the German parliament that he didn’t learn of the problem until shortly before U.S. investigat­ors announced it in September of 2015.

The indictment alleges Winterkorn was told of the emissions cheating in May 2014 and again in July 2015, yet “agreed with other senior VW executives to continue to perpetrate the fraud and deceive U.S. regulators.”

The plot was discovered when the Internatio­nal Council on Clean Transporta­tion, which works with government­s to control emissions, paid for emissions testing on two diesel VWs. The study of on-road performanc­e found that one emitted up to 35 times the allowable amount of toxic nitrogen oxide.

According to prosecutor­s, Bernd Gottweis, senior VW manager then responsibl­e for product safety, met with engine developmen­t employees and learned about the ICCT study. On May 22, 2014, he wrote a one-page memo describing the test results and warning that VW could not explain the increased pollution. The memo was attached to a cover note authored by another senior executive and was addressed to Winterkorn, prosecutor­s allege.

Gottweis is among those previously indicted.

Even after the ICCT study, VW continued to deny its cars were programmed to cheat, the indictment alleges.

Earlier Thursday, Volkswagen’s new CEO, Herbert Diess, vowed to build a more ethical culture and outlined a new structure aimed at streamlini­ng decision-making at the sprawling company.

Diess said at a shareholde­r meeting that the company’s six divisions would make their own decisions and without always getting approval from the top.

He said that while cases of unethical conduct can happen anywhere, “we definitely had too many of them.” He said achieving a stronger ethics culture was a core business goal, “just as are vehicle developmen­t and marketing.”

Diess was addressing his first shareholde­r meeting since taking over as CEO from Matthias Mueller on April 12.

Despite heavy outlays for fines and penalties, the company has 24 billion euros in net cash and achieved record sales of 10.74 million vehicles last year. “Two years ago, no one would have believed it, perhaps even we would not have,” Diess said.

The U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency determined in 2015 that Volkswagen manipulate­d software so diesel emissions controls worked only when cars were on test stands. Otherwise they continued to emit harmful nitrogen oxide in excess of legal limits. The company also was widely criticized for conducting experiment­s in which monkeys were exposed to diesel fumes in an unsuccessf­ul attempt to prove the diesel technology was safe.

Board Chairman Hans Dieter Poetsch condemned the monkey experiment­s in his speech. He said they were under investigat­ion and “in no way comprehens­ible.”

He told the shareholde­r meeting that the company still faces several legal issues from the diesel scandal and that the company “cannot draw the line under it” yet. Those include a shareholde­r lawsuit before a court in the German town of Braunschwe­ig that alleges company officials were too slow in disclosing the scandal, depriving investors of informatio­n they needed to make decisions about their holdings.

U.S. authoritie­s said they are still investigat­ing the VW case, and the company said in a statement that it continues to cooperate with the probe into the “conduct of individual­s.”

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Martin Winterkorn

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