FCA Manager Charged With Lying About Emissions Even After Volkswagen Scandal

A grand jury indicted a senior manager at Fiat Chrysler Automobiles NV (FCA) on charges he lied to regulators about diesel emissions, alleging the deception continued even after a scandal over cheating on government environmental tests had engulfed rival Volkswagen AG.
The indictment of the Fiat Chrysler manager, unsealed Tuesday, said others "known and unknown" to the grand jury also criminally conspired to mislead regulators and customers about emissions in diesel-powered vehicles, a scheme they described in emails seized upon by U.S. Justice Department officials.
The charges came on the same day that prosecutors in Germany indicted Volkswagen's current and former CEOs and the company's board chairman on charges they failed to inform investors of that company's diesel-emissions fraud after they learned of it in 2015. Also on Tuesday, German automaker Daimler AG agreed to pay 870 million euros in fines connected to a separate investigation of diesel emissions cheating.
Emanuele Palma, a senior manager of diesel drivability and emissions at Fiat Chrysler, faces charges of conspiracy, fraud, violating federal environmental law and making false statements stemming from work on Fiat Chrysler's emissions system in U.S. vehicles with diesel engines, according to the indictment unsealed Tuesday.
Palma, a 40-year-old Italian citizen, was arrested by the FBI Tuesday morning at his home in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan. In the afternoon, he appeared before a federal judge in Detroit in shackles, a hooded sweatshirt and sweatpants. Magistrate Judge Elizabeth Stafford released him on a $10,000 unsecured bond and ordered him to surrender his passport.
Prosecutors argued Palma represented a "significant flight risk" and sought unsuccessfully to have him placed under GPS monitoring. Palma's lawyer, Kenneth Mogill, argued his client has family in the Detroit area and is cooperating with prosecutors.
The indictment describes what it refers to as a "scheme" to use sophisticated software tricks to deceive regulators about the emissions performance of diesel engines offered in Ram pickup trucks and Jeep sport-utility vehicles.
Palma led a team of engineers who developed diesel engines and calibrated them with software allowing the vehicles to pollute less when undergoing government testing and more when driven on roads, U.S. officials said.
After the disclosure of Volkswagen's emissions fraud in September 2015, the indictment states that the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency asked Fiat Chrysler for more testing of its diesel vehicles. In November 2015, the EPA warned Fiat Chrysler that it suspected some of its vehicles were using secret software to defeat emissions tests.
The indictment charges that months later, in a June 2016 meeting, Palma "personally provided false and misleading representations" to regulators.
Before 2016, Palma worked for VM Motori SpA, a diesel engine manufacturer that was 50% owned by Fiat Chrysler until 2013, when it purchased the remainder of the company.
Fiat Chrysler, which has previously denied purposefully attempting to evade emissions requirements, said in a statement it would "continue to fully cooperate with the authorities, as we have throughout this issue" and declined to comment further.
"The indictment in this case should signal to corporations and individuals working for them that there are significant consequences for attempting to bypass U.S. emissions tests and defraud the American people," said Special Agent in Charge Steven M. D'Antuono of the FBI's Detroit Field Office in statement.
Fiat Chrysler's U.S.-listed shares lost 3 percent to $13 on Tuesday. Milan-listed shared closed down 2 percent.
SETTLED CIVIL CLAIMS
The developments in the U.S. criminal probe signal additional scrutiny of Fiat Chrysler's environmental practices on the horizon, despite the automaker's January settlement of civil claims stemming from the alleged emissions violations.
Fiat Chrysler agreed to pay about $800 million to resolve civil claims from the Justice Department, state officials and customers alleging the company installed illegal software allowing more than 100,000 diesel-powered vehicles to dupe government emissions tests and then pollute beyond legal limits on the road.
The settlement did not resolve any potential criminal liability, the Justice Department said when unveiling the agreement.
Fiat Chrysler at the time said the settlement did not change the company's "position that it did not engage in any deliberate scheme to install defeat devices to cheat emissions tests."
Defeat devices are hardware or software designed to stymie emissions controls, according to regulators.
The renewed focus from U.S. prosecutors on Fiat Chrysler's alleged emissions violations follows cases against Volkswagen and a number of that automaker's current and former executives over use of illegal software to fool government diesel-emissions tests and mislead regulators and consumers.
Volkswagen and some of its executives pleaded guilty to criminal charges in the scandal, and the German automaker paid billions of dollars in penalties.
German prosecutors on Tuesday charged former Volkswagen CEO Martin Winterkorn and other company executives in the scandal. A Winterkorn lawyer said the former CEO rejected the claims. He was previously charged in the United States.
The indictment unsealed Tuesday says Palma and unnamed co-conspirators "purposefully calibrated the emissions control system" in Fiat Chrysler vehicles to produce lower emissions under federal test cycles and release higher amounts of nitrogen oxides during real world driving conditions. They concealed the those moves from U.S. environmental regulators, the indictment alleged.
The alleged fraud allowed Palma and the unnamed co-conspirators to obtain a favourable fuel economy rating that made Fiat Chrysler vehicles more attractive to potential customers, the indictment said. Prosecutors alleged the conduct resulted in deceptive claims to customers that the vehicles featured "clean EcoDiesel engines," the indictment said.
Latest News
Jaiveer Mehra | Jan 28, 2026Toyota Urban Cruiser Hyryder Gets Head-Up Display, Dash Cam With Optional ‘Tech Package’New Tech Pack is offered across all variants and adds in ambient lighting, a head-up display and a dash cam for an additional Rs 29,499.1 min read
car&bike Team | Jan 28, 2026Built for the Long Haul: 1700 Kms on A Triumph Scrambler 400 XA memorable ride with the Triumph Scrambler 400 X from Gurugram to Panchgani to celebrate India Bike Week.1 min read
car&bike Team | Jan 27, 2026MG Majestor Previewed Ahead Of February 12 LaunchSet to be positioned as a more premium alternative to the Gloster, the Majestor is also set to go up against the popular Toyota Fortuner.1 min read
Janak Sorap | Jan 27, 2026Yamaha Recalls Fascino 125 and RayZR 125 Over Front Brake IssueYamaha has announced a large-scale recall impacting over three lakh scooters in India.1 min read
Jaiveer Mehra | Jan 27, 2026India-EU FTA Finalised; Duty On Imported Cars To Drop To 10%While full details are still awaited, the new FTA with the European Union will allow carmakers to import up to 2.5 lakh vehicles a year at a reduced tax rate.1 min read
Janak Sorap | Jan 27, 2026Ducati’s WorldSBK Championship Race Bike Finds a New Home in IndiaA piece of WorldSBK history has landed in India, with Ducati delivering Álvaro Bautista’s actual 2023 championship-winning Panigale V4 R to a private collection in Mumbai.1 min read
Bilal Firfiray | Jan 21, 2026Tata Punch Facelift Review: New Turbo Engine; Same Old SoulWith the update, the Tata Punch facelift retains its character of being a healthy runabout, which is perfect for Indian roads. But have these changes made it any better?7 mins read
Amaan Ahmed | Jan 17, 2026Bajaj Chetak C25 First Ride Review: Basic, Likeable E-Scooter For First-Time RidersThe Chetak C25, in quite a few ways, is poles apart from the larger and more powerful 30 and 35 Series models, but in its mannerisms, it is very much a Chetak.8 mins read
Bilal Firfiray | Jan 9, 2026Toyota Urban Cruiser Hyryder: 10,000 km Long-Term ReviewAfter spending over three months and 10,000 km with the Toyota Urban Cruiser Hyryder Hybrid, we were impressed by its real-world mileage, seamless hybrid, practical comfort, and Toyota reliability. Is it the best C-SUV then?5 mins read
Seshan Vijayraghvan | Jan 8, 20262026 Mahindra XUV 7XO Review: Big On Tech, Bigger On ComfortThe new Mahindra XUV 7XO is flashier, feature packed, and comes with more advanced tech. But are the changes just incremental or actually substantial?1 min read
Preetam Bora | Jan 10, 2026Simple One Gen 2 First Ride Review: 265 km Claimed Range!The Gen 2 model of Simple Energy’s first electric scooter gets a fair few updates, including new features, tech, more range and lighter weight. We spent a couple of hours with the Simple One Gen 2 to find out if it manages to impress.6 mins read




















































































































