U.S. officials announced a $1.6 billion deal with Toyota's Hino Motors unit to settle charges it deceived regulators about the amount of emissions spewed by its diesel engines.
Harvard University has hired another law firm to help it navigate a U.S. House investigation into its response to claims of ...
A Toyota subsidiary has agreed to pay more than $1.6 billion and plead guilty for violations related to the submission of ...
The U.S. government said that Hino Motors fraudulently altered its emission and fuel consumption data to sell over 105,000 ...
The U.S. Justice Department, Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), FBI, Customs and Border Protection (CBP), Department of ...
The Justice Department charged Toyota truck unit Hino in U.S. District Court in Detroit, and NHTSA levied a civil penalty ...
Toyota subsidiary Hino Motors will pay $1.6 billion to resolve federal and state claims over falsified emissions data and ...
Fines of more than $525 million have been levied against Hino Motors for falsifying data related to emissions performance by ...
The truck and bus manufacturer is the subject of NHTSA's largest-ever settlement, which has to do with faked emissions and ...
Hino Motors will plead guilty to submitting false emissions data to regulators for more than 100,000 heavy-duty trucks. The ...