
Audio By Carbonatix
Authorities in Germany, Italy and Switzerland have raided the offices of car giant Fiat-Chrysler and truck maker CNH Industrial over claims some engines produced illegal levels of emissions.
The action concerns alleged use of so-called "defeat devices" to mask vehicles' diesel pollution output.
Engines used by Fiat, Alfa Romeo and Jeep, as well as CNH's Iveco trucks are the focus of the probe.
UK authorities have also asked two firms in London to provide documents.
Fiat-Chrysler Automobile (FCA) and CNH Industrial (CNH) are both controlled by Exor, the holding company of Italy's Agnelli family.
A statement from Eurojust, a European Union agency for criminal cooperation across member states, said the probe is looking into a "number of people" who may have been involved in allegedly allowing use of the devices. It did not name them.
The raids, initiated by German prosecutors investigating emissions fraud, involve claims that defeat devices were used in engine management software in 200,000 vehicles.
Use of software to flatter emissions levels hit the headlines over the Volkswagen "diselegate" affair. Defeat devices allow engines to meet pollution levels under laboratory tests but shut down the emissions control system in real-world driving conditions.
UK documents
Eurojust did not name the companies raided. However, FCA and CNH issued similar statements, acknowledging that investigators had turned up at several offices in Europe, and that they are cooperating fully with authorities.
Eurojust also said that "UK authorities have ordered two companies in London to produce relevant documents". Again, these companies were not named.
The statement said: "Defeat devices are illegal according to the European Union regulations in place. Vehicles with defeat devices are not approved for road usage in the EU and consumers with such devices installed in their cars face possible driving bans."
Wednesday's raids were at three offices in Germany, in Baden-Württemberg and Hesse, three locations in the Piedmont region of Italy, and one location in the Swiss canton of Thurgau.
The VW dieselgate scandal broke in 2015, since when Europe's biggest carmaker has paid out €30bn (£27bn) in fines and been investigated by regulators across the world. In the UK, motorists are involved in legal action for compensation.
But VW is far from the only manufacture caught in claims about defeat devices. Nissan, Ford, and Daimler are among many firms whose true emissions levels have been challenged.
Latest Stories
-
Adom Brands to host ‘Democracy Is Not For Sale’ forum in Takoradi today
36 seconds -
Afenyo-Markin says tribunals bill could worsen pressure on suspects to plead guilty
10 minutes -
EOCO bail conditions should not become punitive tool, says Kofi Tonto
17 minutes -
Afenyo-Markin warns tribunal panel structure could expose justice system to abuse
23 minutes -
Tribunals bill could return Ghana to “tsoo Boi” justice – Afenyo-Markin
28 minutes -
24-Hour Economy is about productivity, not round-the-clock work – Goosie Tanoh
31 minutes -
Shift investment to other regions to drive 24-Hour Economy- Ato Gaisie to gov’t
41 minutes -
School bus crash kills at least 20 pupils in Uganda
47 minutes -
NPP condemns one-year jail term for TikToker Camilla Alhassan, says free speech is ‘not a crime’
50 minutes -
Today’s Front pages: Friday, July 17, 2026
1 hour -
Jay Foley returns to music production, hints at releasing star-studded EP
1 hour -
GH¢38.99bn flagged by Auditor-General, but only GH¢12.72bn recovered – PAC Vice Chairman
2 hours -
Davis Opoku proposes AI auditing, contract portal to strengthen public financial accountability
2 hours -
We’ve signed $5.5bn agreements to transform economy, 1.7m jobs to be created – 24-Hour Economy Secretariat
2 hours -
Kumasi-Anwomaso power upgrade to more than double transmission capacity – Energy Minister
2 hours