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Audi: 2.1M Vehicles Affected In Emissions-Rigging Scandal

LOS ANGELES (CBSLA.com/AP) German prosecutors on Monday opened an investigation against former Volkswagen CEO Martin Winterkorn to establish what his role was in the company's emissions-rigging scandal.

The investigation will concentrate on the suspicion of fraud committed through the sale of vehicles with manipulated emissions data, and aims to determine who was responsible, prosecutors in Braunschweig said in a statement.

Meanwhile, Volkswagen AG's upmarket Audi brand has announced 2.1 million of its vehicles are among those with the engines affected by the emissions-rigging scandal.

Audi said on Monday that the engine in question was built into 1.6-liter and 2-liter turbo diesel models in the A1, A3, A4, A6, TT, Q3 and Q5 ranges, news agency dpa reported.

The cars involved have engines in the "euro 5" emissions category; those with the newer "euro 6" engines aren't affected by the emissions scandal.

CBS2's Joy Benedict reported 13,000 of the Audi vehicles are expected to be located within the United States.

It was not immediately clear how many vehicles are based here in Southern California.

In the German system, anyone can file a criminal complaint with prosecutors, who are then obliged to examine them and decide whether there is enough evidence to open a formal investigation.

In this case, following the revelations about the rigged tests, prosecutors in Braunschweig, near VW's headquarters in Wolfsburg, received about a dozen complaints, including one from Volkswagen itself, said spokeswoman Julia Meyer.

She said it was too early to say if and when prosecutors may try and interview Winterkorn himself, and that she did not know whether he already had an attorney to represent him.

She said at this stage, she could not estimate how long the investigation would last.

"This is a very broad case and in other such investigations it has taken many months, sometimes years," she said.

Winterkorn, Volkswagen's CEO since 2007, resigned Wednesday — days after the world's top-selling carmaker admitted that it had rigged diesel emissions to pass U.S. tests during his tenure. He said that he was going "in the interests of the company even though I am not aware of any wrongdoing on my part."

Under German law, it is not possible to bring charges against a company — only against individuals. Meyer would not elaborate on specifics of the investigation, and it wasn't clear what Winterkorn's suspected role might be.

The head of VW's Porsche division, Matthias Mueller, was appointed Friday as his successor.

The company has admitted that it used a piece of engine software to cheat on diesel car emissions tests in the U.S. It will have to fix programming it has said is in some 11 million cars worldwide, far more than the 482,000 originally identified by U.S. authorities.

Details on what cars are involved have emerged gradually. The group, which has 12 marques in all, said Friday that some 5 million cars made by its core Volkswagen brand had the diesel engine in question.

Volkswagen has reportedly set aside more than $7 billion to fix the problem.

(TM and © Copyright 2015 CBS Local Media, a division of CBS Radio Inc. and its relevant subsidiaries. CBS RADIO and EYE Logo TM and Copyright 2013 CBS Broadcasting Inc. Used under license. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)

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