German Prosecutors Backtrack on Winterkorn Focus for Investigation

Aaron Cole
by Aaron Cole

German prosecutors on Thursday said they focused too quickly on former Volkswagen CEO Martin Winterkorn and removed a statement from earlier this week that they were investigating the former executive for the scandal that has engulfed the German carmaker.

In a statement by the Lower Saxony prosecutor’s office obtained by Automotive News Europe on Thursday, the office said there must be “concrete facts” before officially investigating Winterkorn. So far, no specific individuals have been named in the office’s investigation.

The stakes are high for whomever may be responsible for the 11 million cars that illegally cheated emissions tests. Volkswagen supervisory board member Olaf Lies told The Local in Germany that “those people who allowed this to happen, or who made the decision to install this software — they acted criminally. They must take personal responsibility.”

Several outlets reported that German authorities are compelled to investigate criminal complaints that are made by anyone. In the days following the scandal that ultimately cost Winterkorn his job, dozens of criminal complaints came in against Winterkorn, including at least one from within Volkswagen.

Volkswagen has fired several high-ranking technical executives so far, and the company may announce more in the coming days. One analyst told a German business newspaper that its presumed next chairman may not be immune to the scandal.

“(Hans Dieter) Poetsch’s possible nomination as new supervisory board chief is looking increasingly questionable,” German fund manager Hans-Christian Hirt told Handelsblatt.

When Winterkorn resigned, he said he took responsibility for the illegal “defeat devices”, but said he did not know they were developed or included in Volkswagen’s cars.


Aaron Cole
Aaron Cole

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  • DeeDub DeeDub on Oct 01, 2015

    "the office said there must be “concrete facts” before officially investigating Winterkorn." Are they saying that they won't investigate whether Winterkorn was involved until someone else produces evidence that Winterkorn was involved?

    • Redliner Redliner on Oct 01, 2015

      Considering that VW and one of their major suppliers, Bosch are some of the largest employers in Germany, I'm sure the powers that be are eager to issue a few fines and maybe a few months of "house arrest" for the fall-guys and have all of this unpleasantness go away.

  • Brettc Brettc on Oct 01, 2015

    I LOL'd at "Olaf Lies". I know that's a German guy's name, but it's too perfect for this. I bet Olaf knows some things.

  • Theflyersfan The last 10 laps of the Indy 500. And Kyle Larson showing that he could drive an IndyCar. Few too many wrecks earlier, but the ending more than made up for it.
  • ToolGuy "the Volkswagen logo at the front is illuminated for the first time"• I didn't want to like it, but now I have to. 😉
  • ToolGuy "There's a heavy shake/vibration at speeds between 60-75mph or so, before that range, it doesn't shake, and after that speed range, it also doesn't shake. But when it does shake, it can be pretty violent. The van runs beautifully at 80-90+mph but that just so happens to be when the engine light starts flashing, giving the random misfire code."• When you rich genuises in your brand new cars decide to drive 'aggressively' and believe nothing can go wrong, remember that you are sharing the road with this guy.
  • Master Baiter Paint job looks like a Smurf puked on it.
  • ToolGuy The old 'pricing jump on the balance sheet' trick... 😉
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