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Volkswagen must face U.S. investor lawsuit in emissions scandal –judge

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Volkswagen AG and former Chief Executive Officer Martin Winterkorn must defend an investor lawsuit in California over the company’s diesel emissions cheating scandal, a U.S. judge ruled.

U.S. District Judge Charles Breyer also rejected a request by VW brand Chief Herbert Diess to have the proposed securities fraud lawsuits tossed out of a California court on Wednesday.

Other defendants include VW’s U.S. unit and its Audi of America unit and the former head of its U.S. unit, Michael Horn.

The investors suing are mostly U.S. municipal pension funds that invested in VW through American-Depositary-Receipts (ADR).

This, is a form of equity-ownership in a non-U.S. company that represents the foreign-shares of the company held on deposit by a bank in the company’s home country.

Volkswagen argued that German courts were the proper place for investor lawsuits.

Breyer said in his ruling “because the United States has an interest in protecting domestic investors against securities fraud’’ the lawsuits should go forward in a US court.

The pension funds included those representing Arkansas State Highway Employees and Miami Police.

The lawsuits said VW’s market capitalisation fell by 63 billion dollars after the diesel cheating scandal became public.

A VW Spokeswoman had no immediate comment Wednesday.

Winterkorn resigned days after the scandal became public and much of the company’s management has changed since 2015.

VW had in September 2015, admitted using sophisticated secret software in its cars to cheat exhaust emissions tests, with 11 million vehicles worldwide affected.

The cheating allowed nearly 580,0000 VW’s U.S. diesel vehicles sold since 2009 to emit up to 40 times legally allowable pollution levels.

The lawsuits said VW and its executives misled the investing public “assuring them to the contrary – namely, that the diesel vehicles met all applicable-emissions-standards” and it”understated the liabilities that it would suffer as a result of its known emissions-non-compliance.”

Volkswagen has agreed to spend as much as 17.5 billion dollars in the United States to resolve claims from owners and federal and state regulators over polluting diesel vehicles.

Volkswagen could still spend billions of dollars more to resolve a U.S Department of Justice criminal-investigation and federal and state environmental-claims; come under oversight by a federal monitor and face other conditions.

The Justice Department and VW are in settlement talks and it is possible a deal could be reached before Jan. 20, when President Barack Obama leaves office, according to sources briefed on the matter. (Reuters/NAN)

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