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Stellantis unit sentenced in US diesel emissions probe, will pay $300 million

Reuters

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Stellantis unit sentenced in US diesel emissions probe, will pay $300 million

VEHICLE ASSEMBLY. An assembly line with 2014 Ram 1500 pickup trucks is seen at the Warren Truck Plant in Warren, Michigan, September 25, 2014.

Rebecca Cook/Reuters

FCA US had been charged with making false representations about diesel emissions in more than 100,000 Jeep Grand Cherokee and Ram 1500 vehicles

WASHINGTON, USA – The US business of Fiat Chrysler Automobiles was sentenced Monday, August 1, after pleading guilty in June to criminal conspiracy and will pay nearly $300 million to resolve a multi-year US Department of Justice (DOJ) diesel-emissions fraud probe.

FCA US LLC, formerly Chrysler Group LLC, previously struck a plea agreement with the DOJ and agreed to pay a $96.1-million fine and forfeit $203.6 million. FCA US, now a unit of Stellantis NV, was also sentenced to a three-year term of organizational probation.

The company had been charged with making false representations about diesel emissions in more than 100,000 US 2014-2016 Jeep Grand Cherokee and Ram 1500 diesel vehicles.

The DOJ said FCA had conspired to cheat US emissions tests.

The $300-million criminal penalty “is the result of an exhaustive three-year investigation,” said Assistant Attorney General Todd Kim. “This resolution shows that the Department of Justice is committed to holding corporate wrongdoers accountable for misleading regulators.”

The government noted FCA US had previously paid a $311-million civil penalty and $183 million more in compensation to over 63,000 people as part of a class-action diesel lawsuit.

The automaker must conduct an initial review of its compliance with the Clean Air Act and inspection and testing procedures, submit a report, and prepare at least two follow-up reports. Reuters first reported the planned settlement in May.

The DOJ said FCA US installed deceptive software features intended to avoid regulatory scrutiny and fraudulently help the diesel vehicles meet required emissions standards.

Stellantis said earlier it had accrued 266 million euros to account for the settlement. FCA merged with French Peugeot maker PSA in 2021 to form Stellantis.

Three FCA US employees have been indicted for conspiracy to defraud the United States and violate the Clean Air Act and are awaiting trial.

The plea deal comes five years after Volkswagen pleaded guilty to criminal charges to resolve its own emissions crisis affecting nearly 600,000 US vehicles in a scandal that became known as “Dieselgate.” VW has paid more than $30 billion in connection with the scandal. – Rappler.com

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