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						Still a 'lot of work to do' for VW after diesel scandal 
						- U.S. compliance auditor
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		 [November 13, 2018]  
		By Andrea Shalal 
 BERLIN (Reuters) - Volkswagen <VOWG_p.DE> and an independent monitoring 
		team still have "a lot of work to do" before the company's compliance 
		procedures can be certified after a $27 billion global emissions 
		cheating scandal, Larry Thompson, an independent compliance auditor, 
		said on Thursday.
 
 Thompson, a former deputy U.S. attorney general, was installed in 2017 
		as compliance auditor as part of VW's criminal plea agreement with the 
		U.S. Justice Department.
 
 Thompson had been due to appear at a conference hosted by German 
		magazine Automobilwoche, but instead spoke to participants in a video 
		recording due to a scheduling conflict.
 
 He said VW was making good progress on improving its processes, and 
		cited what he called "very good cooperation and support" by VW's project 
		management office, as well as top company executives and the works 
		councils of both VW and Audi.
 
		
		 
		VW and other German carmakers agreed on Thursday to spend up to 3,000 
		euros ($3,430) per vehicle, including through trade-in incentives, to 
		help reduce diesel emissions given a growing number of driving bans in 
		major cities.
 
 Top German politicians say the emissions cheating scandal damaged the 
		global reputation of the German car industry, and say consumers should 
		not bear the cost of retrofitting cars.
 
 Thompson said his team had reviewed thousands of pages of documents and 
		spoken with hundreds of employees and officers. Now, he said, VW and the 
		monitoring team would begin testing to ensure revamped compliance 
		procedures actually worked.
 
		
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			Workers clean the facade of a car showroom under a Volkswagen logo 
			on the Chinese National Day in Beijing, China October 1, 2018. 
			Picture taken October 1, 2018. REUTERS/Stringer 
              
            
			 
"This effort is critical. Ultimately I must certify that the company's 
compliance program is effective, that it is designed to prevent and detect 
violations of the anti-fraud and environmental laws," he said. "Both the company 
and the monitor team have a lot of work to do before certification."
 In August, when Thompson released a first public report on the turnaround 
effort, he said he disagreed with some VW executives' use of privacy and 
attorney client privilege rights to withhold information.
 
Hiltrud Werner, VW's chief of integrity and legal affairs, said the company was 
working hard to transform its culture through a wide range of measures, 
including asking managers to take be more pro-active about compliance issues.
 "This is a hot phase for us, and that means we must bundle all energies in the 
company," she told the conference, adding that certification was due to be 
completed by mid-2020.
 
 "It is my personal conviction that we don't need more compliance experts, we 
need 100-percent compliant managers," she said, adding the goal was to ensure 
that top managers were forced to "permanently grapple with this issue, and that 
it remains in the consciousness of everyone."
 
 (Reporting by Andrea Shalal, editing by Tassilo Hummel, David Evans and 
Alexandra Hudson)
 
				 
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