Chicago Sun-Times

Judge approves $ 15B VW settlement

Emissions scandal deal ‘ fair, reasonable and adequate,’ he says

- Nathan Bomey @ NathanBome­y

A federal judge on Tuesday authorized a nearly $ 15 billion U. S. settlement over the Volkswagen Group emissions scandal, setting into motion a massive vehicle buyback program and greenlight­ing environmen­tal remediatio­n efforts.

Judge Charles Breyer of the U. S. District Court in San Francisco approved the sweeping agreement among consumers, the U. S. government, California regulators and the German automaker in a written ruling a week after signaling he was likely to sign off.

He said the agreement is “fair, reasonable and adequate.”

The settlement comes about a year after Volkswagen admitted that it rigged 11 million vehicles worldwide with software to dodge emissions standards.

The company still is facing criminal investigat­ions by the U. S. Justice Department and German prosecutor­s. The U. S. probe could lead to additional financial penalties and criminal indictment­s.

About 475,000 Volkswagen owners in the U. S. can choose between a buyback or a free fix and compensati­on, if a repair becomes available.

Buybacks range in value from $ 12,475 to $ 44,176, including restitutio­n payments. People who opt for a fix approved by the Environmen­tal Protection Agency will receive payouts ranging from $ 5,100 to $ 9,852, depending on the book value of their car.

Volkswagen also will pay $ 2.7 billion for environmen­tal mitigation and another $ 2 billion for clean- emissions infrastruc­ture.

And the company has agreed to a $ 1.2 billion settlement with dealers over the same matter. VW also is negotiatin­g a separate settlement with more than 80,000 owners of 3- liter diesel vehicles fitted with similar software.

More than 336,000 of eligible VW owners have registered for the settlement, though they could back out if VW can’t come up with a fix. The company has yet to get approval from the Environmen­tal Protection Agency, and if it fails to do so, everyone will be offered the buyback option.

VW plaintiffs attorney Elizabeth Cabraser told Judge Breyer last week that the deal “set a land speed record— probably an air speed record as well.”

Fewer than 1% of eligible VW owners opted out of the deal before the September deadline. People who did not respond are automatica­lly considered to have taken the offer.

About two dozen VW owners objected to the deal during an Oct. 18 hearing. Most of the objections boiled down to complaints over the amount of the payout, while some critics also lambasted the automaker’s “clean diesel” advertisin­g and purposeful environmen­tal pollution.

VW attorney Robert Giuffra told the judge the deal “may well be one of the biggest settlement­s in consumer history” and represents VW’s concerted attempt tomake things right.

“Under any circumstan­ce this is a fair and reasonable settlement for consumers,” he said.

( The deal) “may well be one of the biggest settlement­s in consumer history.” Robert Giuffra, attorney for Volkswagen

 ?? PAUL J. RICHARDS, AFP/ GETTY IMAGES ??
PAUL J. RICHARDS, AFP/ GETTY IMAGES
 ?? MARKUS SCHREIBER, AP ?? Volkswagen admitted to rigging 11 million vehicles.
MARKUS SCHREIBER, AP Volkswagen admitted to rigging 11 million vehicles.

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