Volkswagen’s Oliver Schmidt arrested by FBI in dieselgate case
Schmidt is accused of conspiring to keep US regulators from finding VW’s cheat software back in 2014; more arrests are planned.
The US’s Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) has arrested Volkswagen executive Oliver Schmidt for conspiring to keep regulators from discovering emissions cheat software.
The previous emissions compliance boss for Volkswagen’s US activities was arrested on Saturday. The move comes as part of a criminal investigation into the Volkswagen emissions scandal, commonly referred to as dieselgate, and is reported to be the first of several arrests planned by the FBI.
Schmidt is accused of deliberately trying to deceive regulators during their earliest dieselgate investigations. He is said to have labelled omissions in test results as technical faults, rather than admitting they were caused by emissions cheat software.
German-born Schmidt appeared before Parliament in Britain in the months following September 2014, when Volkswagen admitted to violating emissions regulatory laws in the US. He was one of the first VW representatives to say the brand’s actions were not technically illegal in Europe.
The FBI and Schmidt’s lawyers have so far not commented on his arrest. He is due to appear before a US court on Monday.
Reports on Automotive News Europe suggest the FBI will arrest more German-based VW executives as part of its ongoing investigations, but no names have been revealed as of yet.
Recommended:
- Volkswagen to pay $ 4.3 billion to USA for dieselgate
- Volkswagen Group sales up 3.8% in 2016 despite emissions crisis
RELATED ARTICLES
Sept 2024 From R&D incentives to EV infrastructure: What auto components industry expects from Budget 2024
Sept 2024 From R&D incentives to EV infrastructure: What auto components industry expects from Budget 2024
US car majors hit the brakes on driverless cars
Ford Motor and Volkswagen to close self-driving startup Argo AI, due to lack of technology and clear regulations.
Autoliv and Geely to develop advanced safety tech for future vehicles
Scope of cooperation includes safety for high-level autonomous driving, intelligent steering wheel technology, a 360deg ...