Porsche and Audi offices in Germany raided by legal officials
Investigators inspected and seized documents during the raids carried out as part of an investigation into the dieselgate scandal
German legal officials have carried out raids on Porsche and Audi offices in Stuttgart and Ingolstadt.
Prosecutors from Stuttgart and Munich, as well as around 160 police officers, went to a total of 10 sites in the German states of Baden-Wurttemberg and Bavaria.
The raids were part of a fraud investigation, in which two current Porsche employees and one former one have been connected with the dieselgate scandal.
Prosecutors confirmed that one of the accused is a member of Porsche’s executive board and the other is a senior manager, while the third no longer works for the manufacturer.
Both Porsche and Audi are part of Volkswagen Group, which admitted to cheating emissions tests in 2015, but this is the first time the former of the two manufacturers has had any of its offices raided as a result of the affair.
A Porsche spokesperson told us: “We confirm that investigators today inspected and secured documents at the offices of Porsche AG in Stuttgart and Audi AG in Ingolstadt.
“Audi AG and Porsche AG are cooperating fully with the investigating authorities.
“Please appreciate that we can’t comment on further details due to the ongoing investigation.”
The raids comes a matter of days after Volkswagen began a massive reorganisation, in which it replaced its chief executive officer, Matthias Muller, with former BMW executive Herbert Diess.
The shake-up also saw Oliver Blume, the head of Porsche’s sports car division, promoted to Volkswagen Group’s top management body.