Japanese Spark Plug Giant NGK Pleads Guilty to Price Fixing, to Pay $52M Fine

9 years, 7 months ago - 21 August 2014, Autoblog
Japanese Spark Plug Giant NGK Pleads Guilty to Price Fixing, to Pay $52M Fine
The ongoing investigation by the Department of Justice into price fixing in the automotive industry has nabbed one more company breaking the law.

Japanese parts giant NGK Spark Plug Company agreed to plead guilty to a felony count of pricing fixing and bid rigging in the in the US District Court in Detroit. Its punishment is a $52.1 million criminal fine and to continue to cooperate with the DOJ's sleuthing into the problem.

According to the DOJ, NGK conspired to fix prices on spark plugs, standard oxygen sensors, and air fuel ratio sensors on vehicles from major automakers in the US, including the former DaimlerChrysler, Honda and Toyota, in a scheme that ran from at least January 2000 to July 2011. The charge claimed that the company and its co-conspirators held meetings where they agreed on bids and price quotes that were submitted to the automakers.

With the latest plea, the DOJ has caught 28 companies and 26 executives for price-fixing and bid rigging in the auto parts industry, and they have collected $2.4 billion in criminal fines. In 2013, the feds brought nine Japanese suppliers down at once, to collect $740 million.