VW Is Said to Cheat on Diesel Emissions; U.S. Orders Big Recall


Wolfgang Hatz arrested

German Police Arrest Volkswagen’s Former Engine Chief in Emissions Scandal

BERLIN—The investigation into Volkswagen AG’s emissions-cheating scandal took a dramatic turn Thursday, when the former engine chief of the auto maker was arrested in connection with its rigging of diesel-powered cars to dupe regulators, a person familiar with the situation said.

Wolfgang Hatz was arrested on Wednesday and arraigned before a judge in Munich on Thursday, after which he was held in pretrial detention, the person said. It wasn’t immediately clear whether Mr. Hatz would be released on bail.

The arrest is significant because Mr. Hatz oversaw engine development at the time Volkswagen engineers devised a plan to install illegal software on some diesel engines to make them appear as though they could meet strict restrictions on tailpipe emissions in the U.S.

Mr. Hatz, the most senior executive to be arrested in the investigation, was also a confidant of Martin Winterkorn, the former chief executive of Volkwagen who resigned days after the scandal was made public. Mr. Winterkorn has denied any knowledge of the use of illegal engine software to game emissions tests. He hasn’t been accused of wrongdoing in connection with the investigation.

A motor-racing enthusiast, Mr. Hatz joined Volkswagen in 2001 and spent much of his career in engine development, with earlier stints at BMW , Opel and Fiat . He ran Audi ’sengine-development program from 2001 to 2007, when he also served as Volkswagen’s engine chief.


In 2011, he was made a board member at Porsche AG , Volkswagen’s sports-car maker, in charge of research and development. At Porsche, he was instrumental in developing the engine with which Porsche won the 24-hour Le Mans race in 2015. He also played a key role in developing Porsche’s first electric sports car, the “Mission E,” meant to rival Tesla cars when it is launched in 2019.

German authorities wouldn’t identify Mr. Hatz by name, citing the country’s privacy laws. They would only confirm that a person had been arrested on Wednesday in connection with an investigation into the role of Audi, Volkswagen’s luxury-car unit, in the emissions-cheating scandal.

That person, they said, appeared in court on Thursday where a judge read out the charges of fraud and illegal advertising.

U.S. environmental regulators disclosed in September 2015 that Volkswagen had installed illegal software on some diesel engines used in cars that were sold to American consumers. Volkswagen then admitted to installing the software on millions of vehicles world-wide.

By the end of 2016, Volkswagen had pleaded guilty to conspiracy to defraud the U.S. government and had settled a number of civil lawsuits and agreed to pay nearly $25 billion in fines, penalties and compensation for consumers.

The Justice Department has indicted several Volkswagen employees and former employees in connection with the scandal. Two Volkswagen employees pleaded guilty in the U.S. One has been sentenced to serve 40 months in prison. Another is in prison awaiting sentencing.

Engineers at Volkswagen rigged 2-liter diesel engines for compact cars that were used by Volkswagen and some of its other brands to turn on emissions controls when the car was being tested and to turn controls off when the car was back on the road.

At Audi, engineers installed the software on larger 3-liter diesel engines that were used by Audi, Porsche, and Volkswagen in larger sedans and sport-utility vehicles.

Although German investigations have been under way for two years, authorities have charged only two people. Prosecutors in Braunschweig have said they are investigating nearly 50 people in connection with the scandal, including Mr. Winterkorn.


Law-enforcement officials raided Audi’s offices in March, arriving shortly before the company was preparing to hold an unrelated news conference, as dozens of journalists and stock-market analysts looked on.

In July, police arrested Zaccheo Giovanni Pamio, a former Audi employee who was head of thermodynamics in the car maker’s engine-development department.

Mr. Pamio was the first person arrested in Germany in connection with the Volkswagen scandal. Mr. Pamio hasn't commented on the charges, but his lawyer in Germany has said that Mr. Pamio is cooperating with investigators. He is currently in jail in Germany.

The U.S. government has indicted eight people, including Mr. Pamio.

Most of the former managers who have been charged are in Germany and out of the reach of U.S. authorities because Germany doesn’t extradite its citizens. Mr. Pamio is an Italian citizen and could be extradited to the U.S. It isn’t clear whether the U.S. has requested his extradition.



Link German Police Arrest Volkswagen’s Former Engine Chief in Emissions Scandal
 
Working their way to the top?

I'd say it's more like "shit is filtering down".

I don't buy this crap, that the emission scandal was the idea of a few low level engineers. To pull off a con of this magnitude is not a simple task.
 
I'd say it's more like "shit is filtering down".

I don't buy this crap, that the emission scandal was the idea of a few low level engineers. To pull off a con of this magnitude is not a simple task.

I feel exactly the same.
The notion that engineers went rogue so that the engines would meet all legislation without the board knowing is ludicrous. The Board would be directly responsible for any decisions. And I cannot see this one would have been overlooked as the board would have to be Informed of any outcome in research,development or manufacturing.
They after all sign the cheques to make it happen.
 
The boards of the big companies do not take decisions for illegal actions. When they knew that there was no practical and legal solution (for which they were informed) they pushed some poor senior engine development engineer in the corner and smashed him. Then they told him that he has to find a solution, because this is his job and they would be very disappointed with him, that their decision for putting him on this position was a mistake and then LET him(and his team) take the decision and the responsibility for it, saying that they don't want to know how he would handle the problem. In that way they made him and his team responsible for this decision and guaranteed that this all will remain secret.
Boards always use fuses.
 
How daft do you have to be to still sell new cars with cheating software?

Audi issues new recall after diesel cheating system discovered again

BERLIN — Germany's transport ministry confirmed a media report on Monday that the KBA automotive watchdog detected illicit emission-control software in Audi's latest diesel models and ordered a recall of the vehicles.

Some 127,000 vehicles from Audi, a unit of Volkswagen, designed to meet the latest Euro 6 emissions standards are affected worldwide, including 77,600 vehicles are registered in Germany, a spokeswoman for the German transport ministry said.

Newspaper Bild am Sonntag reported that road transport authority KBA had told Audi to respond by Feb. 2 on how it plans to update vehicle software controlling emissions, making sure the cars are unable to illegally manipulate emission controls.

Audi said in a statement on Sunday that the models had been included in a voluntary recall of 850,000 diesel vehicles with V6 and V8 TDI engines announced in July.


Link: Audi issues new recall after diesel cheating system discovered again
 
Bosch seems to be a recurring name that springs up in all these lawsuits.

Ford sued by truck owners alleging diesel emissions cheating


The law firm representing the owners, Hagens Berman, has launched lawsuits in the last year against General Motors Co and Fiat Chrysler Automobiles NV as well as engine maker Cummins Inc, making similar allegations. In the tests conducted on the F-250 and F-350 vehicles, “emissions are routinely as high as five times the standard,”

In a statement Wednesday, Bosch said allegations against the company “remain the subject of investigations and civil litigation”. Last year, Bosch agreed to pay $327.5 million to U.S. owners of Volkswagen AG (VOWG_p.DE) vehicles for its part in installing illegal emissions-cheating software.


Link: Ford sued by truck owners alleging diesel emissions cheating

Bosch software

Bosch is accused of developing software that enabled Ford to adjust fuel levels, exhaust gas re-circulation, air pressure and urea injection rates while being tested for emissions by regulators including the EPA and California Air Resources Board.

The formula built by Ford and Bosch allowed the Super Duty trucks to reverse the traditional order of exhaust treatment, putting catalytic reduction before the diesel particle filter. This allowed Ford to market both fuel efficiency and power in its vehicles without compromise. The reordering should have forced Ford to burn off the collected particles, sapping the vehicles’ efficiency. Instead the particles were released through the vehicles’ exhaust, according to the complaint.

Link: Ford sued by truck owners claiming diesel engines were rigged
 
German carmaker group sponsored emissions experiments on people: Stuttgarter Zeitung

FRANKFURT (Reuters) - A research organization funded by German carmakers sponsored scientific experiments testing nitrogen dioxide, a gas found in exhaust fumes, on people, German daily Stuttgarter Zeitung said.

The European Research Group on Environment and Health in the Transport Sector, EUGT, commissioned the study, the paper said.

Reuters could not immediately confirm the details of the study and a representative for EUGT, which was dissolved last year, could not be reached for comment.

The research organization received its funding from German carmakers Volkswagen (VOWG_p.DE), Daimler and BMW.



More here: German carmaker group sponsored emissions experiments on people: Stutt
 
German carmaker group sponsored emissions experiments on people: Stuttgarter Zeitung

FRANKFURT (Reuters) - A research organization funded by German carmakers sponsored scientific experiments testing nitrogen dioxide, a gas found in exhaust fumes, on people, German daily Stuttgarter Zeitung said.

The European Research Group on Environment and Health in the Transport Sector, EUGT, commissioned the study, the paper said.

Reuters could not immediately confirm the details of the study and a representative for EUGT, which was dissolved last year, could not be reached for comment.

The research organization received its funding from German carmakers Volkswagen (VOWG_p.DE), Daimler and BMW.



More here: German carmaker group sponsored emissions experiments on people: Stutt

They should have asked a pharmaceutical company to do it, then it wouldn't be headline news, it'd just be how it's done.
 
Ok, this is not like it sounds: German lab secretly testing poisonous gas on people. Although they have tons of know-how & experience, I guess. ... Dropping the mic.
 
Whis is utterly rotten. How about we put senior members of VAG's emission department in a green house and test Bro-truck fumes on them.

rolling_coal_ban.webp
 
Whis is utterly rotten. How about we put senior members of VAG's emission department in a green house and test Bro-truck fumes on them.

For that to be analogous, they'd have to volunteer to be part of a study on the effects of bro-truck fumes on German fette katzes! I very much doubt the people involved in these tests were forced to take part against their will - probably Aachen university students looking to make 20€ for not doing anything.

Clinical trials and testing on animals is commonplace in pharmaceutical and medical industries, to have a problem with this, but no that, would be hypocritical in my opinion.
 
But VW had tested this worldwide on the public roads for many years, what's so strange to do it in a lab?

In the 90s, carmakers used their political clout to persuade European leaders that diesel helped fight climate change because it burns more efficiently than gasoline. As a result, almost all European countries now tax diesel at a lower rate than gasoline, making it cheaper at the pump.

Its so disgusting to see the extent these companies went through to deceive and harm people, purely to make more money.

In 2014, as evidence mounted about the harmful effects of diesel exhaust on human health, scientists in an Albuquerque laboratory conducted an unusual experiment: Ten monkeys squatted in airtight chambers, watching cartoons for entertainment as they inhaled fumes from a diesel Volkswagen Beetle.

German automakers had financed the experiment in an attempt to prove that diesel vehicles with the latest technology were cleaner than the smoky models of old. But the American scientists conducting the test were unaware of one critical fact: The Beetle provided by Volkswagen had been rigged to produce pollution levels that were far less harmful in the lab than they were on the road.The results were being deliberately manipulated.

Took a page straight out of the operating manual of the tobacco & sugar industry.
Research sponsored by industry “all has the same fundamental aim,” said Joachim Heinrich, an environmental health expert at the University of Munich who has spent his career studying the effects of air pollution, “namely to weaken or discredit regulation — to say ‘the evidence is not that clear,’ ‘we shouldn’t take it so seriously,’ ‘we need to think more about it.’”

The toll on public health has become impossible to ignore. In 2012, 72,000 people in Europe died prematurely because of nitrogen dioxide pollution, which comes primarily from diesel vehicles, according to a report released last year by a committee of the European Parliament.

Link: 10 Monkeys and a Beetle: Inside VW’s Campaign for ‘Clean Diesel’
 

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