Ferrari Has Been Accused Of Odometer Fraud In North America

An angry former Ferrari salesman is suing Ferrari for unfair dismissal, claiming that he was fired for reporting alleged odometer tampering in its US dealerships
Ferrari Has Been Accused Of Odometer Fraud In North America

Ferrari dealers in North America have reportedly been tampering with the mileage readouts on used cars.

As part of a lawsuit being filed by a disgruntled ex-employee (sounds familiar…), an internal Ferrari memo from April 2017 seems to confirm that Ferrari knew what that a specific piece of workshop equipment known as the DEIS tester was being used to reduce cars’ mileages – potentially adding thousands onto the forecourt price.

Bud Root, a former Ferrari salesman, says he was fired after discovering the cheating going on, and claims that Ferrari headquarters knew all along what was going on because they themselves had to provide unique access codes in order for dealers to reset odometers.

However, Ferrari claims that the tool wasn’t able to reset mileages once the subject car’s odometer passed 311 miles (500km).

Ferrari Has Been Accused Of Odometer Fraud In North America

The suit has been filed to a court in Palm Beach, Florida, one of the states where mileage tampering is most severely punishable. The key document is the memo, dated April last year, which reads:

“Officially, as of today, Ferrari SpA will no longer supply the DEIS access codes for the NQS ECU reset cycle to Ferrari Technical Service Departments.

“By May 15, 2017, Ferrari SpA will release a software update for the DEIS tester that includes removing this cycle. This update will cancel any item/paragraph regarding the above NQS ECU reset procedure from the tester.”

Ferrari Has Been Accused Of Odometer Fraud In North America

Ferrari North America’s director of communications, Krista Florin, said that the company had done nothing wrong. In a reply to the Daily Mail she said:

“Resetting an odometer to zero in case of a malfunction of the odometer when the pre-repair mileage is unknown is consistent with the federal odometer law. What the DEIS tool is allowed to do with respect to the odometer was therefore permitted under U.S. law.

“Ferrari determined that the risks of odometer fraud in the United States from unauthorized use of the DEIS tool outweighed the convenience of this functionality of the tool, and thus, Ferrari has informed its network with a technical bulletin that a software update to eliminate the odometer reset functionality of the DEIS tool was necessary and disabled this functionality.”

We’ve reached out to Ferrari North Europe for comment and will update this story if we receive any.

Source: Daily Mail

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Comments

Anonymous

Can i assume the reseting miles thing, isn’t really good business?

03/01/2018 - 11:32 |
2 | 0
Anonymous

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

Hides how much the car has been used, therefore disguising any wear on the engine/drivetrain. Plus, is illegal.

03/01/2018 - 11:44 |
16 | 0
Jakob

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

Of course it’s not. Rolling back the odometer is what really shady used car deales were doing years ago. It’s unacceptable that a certified dealer does that, let alone with full knowledge and support from the manufacturer.

03/01/2018 - 11:56 |
26 | 0
Nishant Dash

Tampering with mileage?
matilda intensifies

03/01/2018 - 11:33 |
230 | 4

“Sawdust lets the engine run as sweet as a nut…for a couple o’ miles” xD!

03/01/2018 - 11:41 |
52 | 0

I remember the Trunchbull scene in the middle of the film where she went from the 1st floor to ground floor via jumping the bannister shouting “Tally Ho!” and landing like an ton of bricks on the floor!

03/01/2018 - 13:20 |
4 | 0
Rahul 1

As if Ferrari themselves, didn’t know that their cars already hold their value strongly, they had to go that extra mile and justify in doing so…

03/01/2018 - 12:14 |
6 | 0
Anonymous

Bold statement here, but this is why I don’t like ferrari. In fact I hate them. Ok sure their cars are beautiful and the performance is good, but with now this and other things such as altering certain press cars so they beat competition and make them look good, it’s just scummy. Someone summed it up really well before: they’re like that popular girl at school who’s really hot but she’s a total horrible person

03/01/2018 - 12:52 |
18 | 0
Mateusz 2

Meh, Polish salesmen done that way before it was cool

03/01/2018 - 13:30 |
0 | 0
straight64life

Hopefully, we’ll get cheap Ferraris very soon

03/01/2018 - 14:12 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

It’s okay. Not like I’m able to afford it any way…

03/01/2018 - 14:29 |
2 | 0
Ian MacDonald

Found a pic from inside the dealerships…

03/01/2018 - 14:30 |
42 | 0

I was about to write that. Anyway, let’s just hope no Ferraris will end up like this:

03/01/2018 - 18:07 |
14 | 0
Rand0m_c1tizen (Jon)

Just Imagine, most of the Ferrari’s probably have a whole 10s of miles before being reset at the dealership

03/01/2018 - 14:42 |
18 | 0
Oechiih

godfather voice never betray the family

03/01/2018 - 14:43 |
0 | 0