Emission
Cheating and Lead Poisoning
Two
legal cases involving egregious harm to public health have moved forward in
recent days, though in very different ways.
In
one case an aggressive prosecutor, defying expectations, filed criminal charges
against three individuals and vowed that they “are only the beginning. There
will be more to come — that I can guarantee you.”
In
the other case, a large company reached a deal in which it will pay to modify
or buy back hundreds of thousands of defective products.
The
case in which the culprits are deservedly having the book thrown at them is the
Flint water crisis, while in the other the boom is not yet being lowered on
Volkswagen.
The first involves misconduct by public officials, the second is a case of brazen corporate crime.
The first involves misconduct by public officials, the second is a case of brazen corporate crime.
Admittedly, the settlement framework announced in the VW case does not necessarily reflect the full scope of the legal issues facing the automaker in connection with its systematic cheating in auto emission testing.
It
is not yet known whether the Justice Department’s reported criminal investigation of the
matter will result in the filing of charges, nor is it clear whether the civil
penalties that may be imposed on VW will come close to the theoretical maximum of $18 billion.
Yet
the decision to announce the tentative buyback deal by itself creates the
impression that it is the centerpiece of the resolution of the VW case. It’s
being estimated that
the U.S. buyback would cost the company about $7 billion. If that turns out to
be the main cost imposed on VW, the automaker would be getting a bargain.
Causing
financial harm to car owners is far from the only sin for which VW has to be
held accountable, and it is probably not the most serious one.
Of
far more consequence are the environmental and public health impacts of the
enormous amount of additional pollution that the VW engines have been spewing
into the air.
What
started out as an effort to circumvent regulations will end up causing an
unknown number of cases of asthma, bronchitis, emphysema, and possibly lung
cancer.
There’s
also the issue of deterrence. If VW and its relevant officials do not face
serious consequences for their actions, people at other corporations may think
they can also flout vital regulations.
It’s
already clear that VW’s emission fraud was not an anomaly. Mitsubishi just admitted it
has been doing the same thing in Japan for at least one of its vehicles.
We
don’t yet know the full story of what happened at VW much less Mitsubishi, yet
it is likely that flagrant emissions deception arose out of a corporate mindset
that sees regulations as obstacles to be overcome rather than legitimate rules
designed to protect the public.
That
mindset will not change until corporations and individuals within them pay as
heavy a price for their transgressions as that facing the public officials who
poisoned the children of Flint.