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The Dutch court found that Stellantis, the company now in control of Stellantis Diesel brands, had cheating software dating back to 2009.

On Wednesday, a Dutch court ruled that diesel cars sold in the Netherlands by Opel Peugeot Citroen DS from 2009 had software to cheat emission tests.

The court, in its interim ruling on a class-action suit brought by Stellantis against the car companies targeted, did not decide whether compensation was to be paid.

Stellantis has denied the allegations and stated that it is considering "appropriate steps" to protect its interests.

Stellantis said that it was "firmly convinced" that the vehicles met all emission standards and that the court had made the wrong interim considerations.

In Europe, the car brands, as well as several other automakers have been investigated in light of Volkswagen's Dieselgate scandal.

The Dutch court stated that it was obvious that the diesel cars sold by four different brands from 2014 had software installed that controlled their emission control systems, resulting in artificially low nitrogen oxide emissions during official tests.

The same was suspected for Peugeot, Citroen, and DS diesels from this generation.

(source: Reuters)