U.S. officials announced a $1.6 billion deal with Toyota subsidiary Hino Motors late Wednesday to settle charges it deceived regulators about the amount of emissions spewed by its diesel engines.
Toyota Motor unit Hino Motors has agreed to a $1.6 billion settlement with US agencies and will plead guilty over excess diesel engine emissions in more than 105,000 US vehicles, the company and ...
Hino to plead guilty to submitting fraudulent engine emission data Truckmaker will pay $521.76 million criminal fine, serve five-year probation Settlement stems from California probe opened in ...
This story has been updated to add new information. Toyota's truck unit Hino Motors will pay a total of $1.6 billion to resolve claims that it falsified fuel-consumption and emissions data for ...
A Toyota subsidiary has agreed to pay more than $1.6 billion and plead guilty for violations related to the submission of ...
Hino Motors, a Toyota subsidiary, will plead guilty to conspiracy charges and pay penalties for deceiving regulators about its diesel engines, the E.P.A. said. By Jack Ewing Toyota Motors ...
Hino Motors, a subsidiary of the Toyota, first acknowledged in 2022 that it has systematically falsified emissions data dating back as far as 2003. That was part of a broader scandal involving ...
US officials late Wednesday announced a $1.6 billion deal with Toyota subsidiary Hino Motors to settle charges it deceived regulators about the amount of emissions spewed by its diesel engines.