Texas sues VW over consumer protection, clean air violations
Sat, Oct 10 2015Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton said Thursday that his state would seek restitution for consumers, and an injunction and civil penalties to prohibit future violations. Paxton, who himself has been indicted for securities fraud, said in a statement, "When companies willfully violate the public's trust, a penalty must be paid." Paxton said Texans purchased around 32,000 affected vehicles. There are about 49 authorized VW dealerships statewide. The Texas suit is asking for pollution fines of somewhere between $50 and $25,000 per vehicle (quite a spread, we know) for each day the vehicles were in use in the state.
Volkswagen admitted in the middle of September that it installed devices designed to defeat government emissions tests on many Volkswagen and Audi diesel cars dating to model year 2009. Globally, 11 million VW group vehicles are affected. The automaker declined to comment to Bloomberg on the Texas lawsuit.
Last month, Harris County, which includes Houston, filed a multimillion dollar lawsuit against VW, alleging the automaker contributed to air quality problems. You can find PDFs of the two state lawsuits here (the deceptive-practices case) and here (the environmental case).
The AP contributed to this report.
- News Source: Bloomberg
- Government/Legal
- Green
- Volkswagen
- Diesel Vehicles
- vw diesel scandal
- lawsuit
By Sebastian Blanco
See also: How the VW diesels perform in cheat mode, 2016 VW diesels are still 'months' out, 2016 Volkswagen Golf GTE First Drive [w/video].
