VW: appears only small number of staff behind scandal

Author: The Associated Press
Published:
Gerry Lauzon / CC BY 2.0

WOLFSBURG, Germany (AP) – Volkswagen believes that only a small number of employees were behind the emissions scandal, but its board chairman said Thursday the company is still investigating and suggested the probe does not exclude top managers.

In an update on the German automaker’s attempt to get to the bottom of the scandal, Hans Dieter Poetsch said “we are relentlessly searching for those responsible for what happened and you may rest assured we will bring these persons to account.”

He confirmed the company had suspended nine managers for possible involvement in the scandal, in which the company was found to have cheated on U.S. diesel emissions tests with the help of software installed in engines. The software was installed on 11 million cars globally, about 500,000 of which in the U.S.

Poetsch said there are so far no indications that board members were directly involved, but indicated the company’s probe would be broad: “This is not only about direct but overall responsibility.”

He said the investigation has so far analyzed data from laptops, phones and other devices from 400 employees. More than 2,000 have been informed in writing that they cannot delete any data in case it becomes relevant to the investigation, he said.

External auditors have already gone through 102 terabytes of data, which he said was the equivalent of 50 million books.

“I’m not saying all of those people are under suspicion, but what it means is that on computers, sim cards, or USB sticks there might be information that could be important,” he said.

“We still believe that only a comparatively small number of employees was actually actively involved in the manipulations.”

CEO Matthias Mueller said that the scandal’s had so far not caused the “massive slump that some feared earlier.” He said “the situation is not dramatic, but as expected it is tense.”

“We are fighting for every customer and every car.”

He said Volkswagen’s finances are strong enough that the company does not have to consider selling any units to cope with the costs of the scandal. The automaker has estimated the scandal would cost 6.7 billion euros, though analysts expect that figure to ultimately be much higher.

To avoid a repeat, Volkswagen will start road testing its vehicles with third-party emissions verifications, as lab tests – so far the norm in the U.S. and Europe – had proved too easy to cheat.

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