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Business / World Business

Germany launches criminal probe against VW’s ex-CEO

Published: 29 Sep 2015 - 12:15 am | Last Updated: 17 Nov 2021 - 10:41 pm
Peninsula

Frankfurt: German prosecutors yesterday announced a criminal investigation against Volkswagen’s former chief executive as the government pressed the embattled auto giant to resolve a pollution cheating scandal that has rocked the auto sector.
The affair will also be on the agenda when the European Union’s 28 trade or industry ministers gather in Luxembourg this week for the first high-level meeting in Europe on the VW crisis since it erupted last week.
In Germany, public prosecutors in the northern city of Brunswick said they have launched a criminal probe against Martin Winterkorn (pictured), who resigned as VW’s CEO after the group revealed that 11 million of its diesel vehicles are equipped with devices that fool official pollution tests.
In his resignation statement, the 68-year-old manager, a renowned perfectionist in the industry, said he was “not aware” of having done anything wrong.
The carmaker’s supervisory board also appeared to absolve him initially, insisting that Winterkorn — who as Germany’s highest-paid executive could under normal rules stand to pocket a payout of around $67m — had not been aware of the fraud. But prosecutors said they were looking to establish the exact chain of responsibility in the scam, which is snowballing into one of the biggest ever in the European automobile industry and threatening to tarnish Germany’s pristine engineering reputation.
“Following a number of legal suits, the public prosecutors in Brunswick have opened an investigation against Martin Winterkorn, the former chief executive of Volkswagen,” they said in a statement.
“The investigation will focus on the allegation of fraud by selling vehicles with manipulated emission values,” it added.
VW on Friday announced it was replacing Winterkorn with the head of VW’s luxury sports car brand Porsche, Matthias Mueller. The new 62-year-old boss faces daunting challenges as he seeks to steer VW out of the wreckage left by the affair.
The German government has given Volkswagen until October 7 to submit measures and a timetable to fix vehicles that have been fitted with the cheating software, a ministry spokesman said. AFP