Auto companies are taking us for a ride By Russell Mokhiber and Robert Weissman The automobile companies are criminal outlaws. That's one conclusion you can easily come to after reading Jack Doyle's new book - Taken for a Ride: Detroit's Big Three and the Politics of Pollution (Four Walls Eight Windows Press, 2000). Given the spectacular advances in clean automobile technology over the century, there is just no reason - other than pure criminality - why we have been forced to live and die today with gas-guzzling, polluting automobiles. In the late 1960s, federal prosecutors in Los Angeles had the same take and opened a grand jury investigation into the automobile industry for conspiring to defeat clean automobile technology. Rising out of the smog capital of the world, Justice Department attorneys wanted to indict the auto companies and their executives, for conspiring to ensure that the internal combustion engine would reign supreme over cleaner air devices - and that thousands of Americans would be poisoned as a result. The auto industry knew that the case would be won in Washington, D.C., not Los Angeles, and hired Lloyd Cutler, who then was an aspiring corporate fix-it man. With Cutler's help, the grand jurors were dismissed, replaced by a spineless civil consent decree that had little impact - as you can clearly see - on our pollution and global warming woes. Clean air advocates, including Los Angeles City Attorney Kenneth Hahn, protested, to no avail. "The presidents of General Motors, Ford and Chrysler should be brought to trial right here in Los Angeles," Hahn wrote in 1968. "The big manufacturers all conspired. If one wouldn't put the devices on, the others wouldn't either. This case is the most important legal battle in the history of the air pollution fight." The foreman of the grand jury, Martin Walsbren, was quite angry over the Justice Department's sell-out to Cutler's gang. He told the Los Angeles Times that there was much more to the case than the consent decree suggested, but there wasn't much he could say "unless I wish to risk going to jail." Then California Congressman Phil Burton got a hold of the original Justice Department criminal memo in the case. The memo shows an auto industry conspiring to defeat pollution control equipment even while lying to public officials about how they were going all-out to develop those technologies. This wasn't the industry's first run-in with criminal prosecutors. In the late 1940s, General Motors and a number of oil, chemical and tire companies were convicted for going around to the major cities and replacing clean, efficient inner city electric trolley systems with polluting diesel buses. This was perhaps the most egregious corporate crime in history. General Motors and the other convicted companies were fined $5,000. The executives were fined $1 each. There have been attempts to outlaw the internal combustion engine - again to no avail, showing once again how corporate criminals have the ability to define the laws under which they live. Take the case of Nicholas Petris. Petris was a California state senator. In 1969, Petris introduced legislation (SB-778) that would prohibit the sale of all diesel- and gasoline-powered internal combustion engines in California by Jan. 1, 1975. The auto industry thought Petris' bill was a joke. They all laughed at it. But the laughter stopped in July 1969, when the California Senate approved it by a vote of 26-5 and sent it to the California Assembly. "People are demanding that we move rapidly to reverse this trend of polluting our air and water in the whole environment," said Petris. The auto industry straightened up and got serious. With future President and then California Gov. Ronald Reagan threatening a veto, the industry laid down the law, and the bill died in the California Assembly. Even before Petris launched his attempt to ban the internal combustion engine, there was one congressional attempt that came at the issue by way of public health. In 1957, Paul Schenck (R-Ohio) introduced a bill that would prohibit the sale of vehicles discharging hydrocarbons in levels found dangerous by the Surgeon General. "Here is a Republican from the Midwest introducing a bill that calls on the Surgeon General to play a public health role," Taken for a ride author Doyle told us recently. "If this technology was found to be a threat to public health, then the Surgeon General would be empowered to prohibit the sale of the internal combustion engine." The bill never made it through Congress in that form. Still, it was a powerful statement at the time about the growing national concern over auto pollution. In 1959, President Eisenhower signed a modified Schenck Act. That law directed the Surgeon General to study the relationship between auto pollution and public health. California law now requires that 10 percent of a car company's fleet be zero emission vehicles by 2003. The inside betting is that, instead of meeting the challenge, the auto industry will work its will in Sacramento and defeat that 2003 standard. There are some, like Amory Lovins of the Rocky Mountain Institute, who believe that the automobile industry can be persuaded to mass produce a hypercar that can make it across our country on one tank of gas. Lovins was in Washington, D.C. recently, the guest of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, invited to make his pitch. But in his book, Doyle argues that for 50 years the companies have had the business opportunity to produce a clean car and they've blown it. "The automakers' own internal cost accounting, recall record and warranty repairs will show that they squandered billions while trying to convince Congress that clean air and better fuel economy were too expensive," Doyle says. Perhaps Lovins can persuade the stick-in-the-mud auto executives to change their ways. But even Bill Ford, who has espoused an environmental vision for his family's auto company, was recently in Washington, D.C. seen lobbying against repeal of the loophole in fuel economy standards that lets Ford make millions on his Explorer, a beast of a sports utility vehicle with single-digit gas mileage. What Doyle's book makes clear is that when it comes to Detroit, the carrot just doesn' t work. Isn't it time to try a little stick? Russell Mokhiber is editor of the Washington, D.C.-based Corporate Crime Reporter. Robert Weissman is editor of the Washington, D.C.-based Multinational Monitor.
