Prosecutors in Stuttgart are set to fine Mercedes-Benz parent Daimler between 800 million and 1 billion euros ($897,000 to $1.12 billion) for diesel-related violations, report says.
The German motor vehicle authority (KBA) had discovered cheating software fitted to Mercedes-Benz C-class and E-class vehicles and ordered the automaker to recall 280,000 vehicles.
A fine of up to 5,000 euros per vehicle is being considered by the Stuttgart prosecutor, the magazine said. A spokesman for the prosecutor’s office said the investigation was ongoing and would not be concluded before year-end. Daimler declined to comment while the investigation was under way.
In May 2017, German prosecutors searched Daimler offices as part of a fraud inquiry related to possible manipulation of exhaust gas after-treatment in diesel cars, and in February 2016 the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency asked Mercedes-Benz to explain emissions levels in some of its diesel cars.
It would also berecalled that, prosecutors in Germany have used administrative orders to impose fines on Volkswagen, Audi and Porsche, blaming senior management for oversight lapses that allowed emissions cheating to take place.
In May, Stuttgart prosecutors fined Porsche Euros 535 million and supplier Bosch Euros 90 million , while prosecutors in Brunswick fined Euros VW 1 billion and Munich prosecutors imposed an Euros 800 million fine against Audi.
MIKE OCHONMA



