Feds Nail Another Diesel Shop With $10M in Fines for Deleting Emissions Equipment [View all]
Last edited Mon Sep 16, 2024, 04:57 PM - Edit history (1)
Hat tip, Jalopnik, but it's all clickbait now.
Edited to add link to the article. Duh.
Feds Nail Another Diesel Shop With $10M in Fines for Deleting Emissions Equipment
It was caught selling, installing, and manufacturing tuning devices that imitated another companys products.
Caleb Jacobs
Posted on Sep 13, 2024 11:51 AM EDT
The United States federal government has
made it clear: Violate the Clean Air Act and youll be in big trouble. Diesel truck tuners have
learned this the hard way over the last three years by paying huge criminal fines and civil penalties,
regularly in the seven-figure range. As it turns out, the Environmental Protection Agency and Department of Justice are willing to go even bigger as theyve nailed a North Carolina aftermarket shop for $10 million.
The DOJ published a
press release earlier this week that named Rudys Performance Parts and its owner Aaron Rudolf for making, selling, and installing emissions defeat devices. Rudys pleaded guilty and was sentenced on Tuesday, Sept. 10, to pay $2.4 million in criminal fines for conspiring to violate the CAA. This follows a previous sentencing and fine from April in which Rudolf was ordered to pay $600,000 and enter a three-year organizational probation period. ... By far the largest monetary penalty comes from a civil suit that the feds filed against Rudys and Rudolf. The DOJ did this on behalf of the EPA for the defendants hand in getting defeat devices to customers while failing to adequately respond to the EPA's formal requests for information. A $7 million consent decree, filed July 29, was the result.
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Court documents say Rudys highest-selling product was the Mini-Maxx tuner, a part manufactured by another entity referred to as Company A. Rudys sold XRT Pro tuners as well, which were also made by Company A. Its worth noting that
H&S Performance, another aftermarket manufacturer that was forced to pay for violating the CAA, built products by the same name. The DOJs press release says that after Company A discontinued the Mini-Maxx and XRT Pro, Rudys conspired with others to make
imitation tuners that were falsely branded. This was initially performed through an agreement with a software technician who agreed to collaborate with Rudys, and that arrangement lasted from July 2015 through December 2016.
Rudys then started faking these tuners in-house. This involved an $850,000 laptop purchase, as the computer contained the software to convert other tuners into Mini-Maxxes and XRT Pros. Until stopping in July 2018, Rudys sold nearly 44,000 imitation tuners and generated about $33 million in revenue from them. All this is as reported by the DOJ.
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Caleb Jacobs
Senior Editor
Caleb Jacobs is The Drives senior editor. When hes not searching for stories or poring over copy, hes usually driving his dump truck or wishing it was running so he could drive it. He was born and raised in the Missouri Ozarks, and he lives there