'We will overcome this crisis': Porsche boss Mueller flips to damage control mode after being named new CEO of scandal-hit Volkswagen

Embattled carmaker Volkswagen tapped Porsche chief Matthias Mueller on Friday to steer it out of the wreckage of a widening scandal over pollution test rigging, as Washington said it would check all diesel cars for devices that fool emissions tests.
The 62-year-old Mueller replaces Martin Winterkorn, who was resigned over the stunning revelations by US environmental authorities that the German carmaker had fitted some of its diesel cars with software capable of tricking environmental tests - a scam that could lead to fines worth more than US$18 billion.
The scale of VW’s deception became clear when the company admitted that 11 million of its diesel cars are equipped with so-called defeat devices that covertly turn off pollution controls when the car is being driven and back on when tests are being conducted.
Calling the cheating a “moral and policy disaster”, the company’s supervisory board chief Berthold Huber said the group is now looking to Mueller, who “knows the company and its brands”, to tackle the crisis.
Board member Bernd Osterloh added that “a small group had caused great damage to Volkswagen”.