Four ex-VW managers guilty of fraud over diesel test scandal
- A German court convicted four former Volkswagen managers on Monday for fraud related to the 2015 Dieselgate emissions scandal.
- The case arose from the US discovery that Volkswagen installed software to cheat on diesel emissions tests nearly a decade ago.
- The trial at the Braunschweig Regional Court lasted almost four years and involved charges of commercial and organised fraud.
- Two executives received prison sentences ranging from two years and seven months to four and a half years, while two others got suspended sentences.
- The convictions underscore Volkswagen’s deep crisis, which caused over $34 billion in costs and numerous lawsuits worldwide.
233 Articles
233 Articles
Polluting vehicles have caused 16,000 premature deaths in the UK alone in just 15 years
Almost 10 years after the original Dieselgate scandal, a new report paints the most comprehensive picture yet of the alarming health and economic impacts of illegally high emissions likely linked to the use of prohibited defeat devices. Dieselgate: the scandal hasn’t ended as surging air pollution-linked deaths show Published by the Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air (CREA) and commissioned by environmental law organisation ClientEarth,…
Ten years after the revelations about Volkswagen's engines, toxic gas emissions have reportedly caused the deaths of 16,000 people in France since 2009, according to an unpublished study.
For the first time, ten years after the "Dieselgate" scandal, a study has been able to estimate the number of deaths associated with fixed diesel engines.
Dieselgate scandal 'cut thousands of lives short' with UK drivers still at risk of 'public health crisis'
The excess pollution emitted as a result of the Dieselgate scandal has killed about 16,000 people in the UK and caused 30,000 cases of asthma in children, according to a new analysis
An independent Finnish centre evaluated, in a study published this Wednesday, the number of deaths caused by pollution hidden by the Volkswagen car manufacturer.
A study by a Finnish research centre published this Wednesday gives for the first time the number of deaths related to this scandal.
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