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White’s Diesel Performance Is The One Who Knocks On Our Clean Air

White’s Diesel: Poison for Profit

TL;DR

  • The Accusation: The U.S. government is suing White’s Diesel Performance, a Florida-based company, for illegally selling and installing “defeat devices” that disable vehicle emission controls.
  • The Products: The company allegedly sold at least 752 illegal devices between Oct 2018 and Nov 2019. This includes 443 hardware parts designed to physically remove pollution controls and 309 software “tunes” to trick the vehicle’s computer.
  • The Harm: These devices unleash excess pollution linked to premature death, heart and lung disease, heart attacks, and aggravated asthma. This is a direct attack on public health.
  • The Obstruction: After being caught, White’s Diesel allegedly failed to provide complete information to the EPA for 849 days, violating a direct federal order.
The EPA first spotted them on Facebook. See what they found in “Legal Receipts.”

The Non-Financial Ledger

This is not a story about car parts. It is a story about the air we breathe. A legal filing by the United States government against White’s Diesel Performance lays out a business model that trades public health for private profit. The government’s complaint, case number 8:24-cv-01791-SDM-SPF, states plainly that disabling vehicle emissions controls “presents a serious threat to human health.”

The document is clear about the consequences. The pollutants that factory-installed systems are designed to capture are linked to a list of horrors: premature death, heart disease, lung disease, heart attacks, and aggravated asthma. Every “delete tune” or “straight pipe” sold and installed is another dose of poison pumped into our neighborhoods, along our highways, and into the lungs of our children.

“Disabling emissions controls from vehicles presents a serious threat to human health. Such emissions are linked to premature death…”

This isn’t an accident or a byproduct. It is the direct, intended result of the products White’s Diesel is accused of selling. The company’s actions, as alleged by the federal government, chose to increase horsepower for a few by jeopardizing the health of many.

Legal Receipts

The Clean Air Act (CAA) is the law of the land, designed to protect the public from exactly this kind of harm. The government’s complaint cites specific sections that White’s Diesel allegedly violated. These are not suggestions; they are federal prohibitions.

The investigation began after EPA officers found damning evidence in plain sight. According to the complaint, they “saw photos of tampered vehicles and aftermarket defeat devices for sale on White’s Diesel’s Facebook page and read customer reviews describing how White’s Diesel installed or sold defeat devices.”

Societal Impact Mapping

Environmental Degradation

The core function of the targeted emissions systems—Exhaust Gas Recirculation (EGR), Diesel Particulate Filters (DPF), and Selective Catalytic Reduction (SCR)—is to capture and neutralize harmful pollutants like Nitrogen Oxides (NOx) and particulate matter (soot). The government alleges that White’s Diesel sold at least 140 EGR Delete products and 303 Aftertreatment System Delete products. Each sale represents a vehicle converted into a high-output pollution machine, directly contributing to smog, acid rain, and air quality degradation.

Alleged Violations by Type (Oct 2018 – Nov 2019)

Bar chart showing alleged violations by White’s Diesel. 0 150 300 450 Number of Violations Hardware Sales Tune Sales Tampering 443 309 46

Public Health Crisis

The link between these specific pollutants and human suffering is not theoretical. The government complaint explicitly connects them. NOx inflames the lungs, reduces immunity to respiratory infections, and worsens conditions like asthma and bronchitis. Particulate matter is small enough to invade the bloodstream, causing cardiovascular and respiratory harm. White’s Diesel’s business, according to the lawsuit, directly fueled this public health crisis.

Economic Inequality

This is a classic case of privatized profits and socialized costs. A business and its customers enjoy the perceived benefits of “performance modifications,” while the general public—especially those living near busy roads or in disadvantaged communities with already poor air quality—pays the price. The bill comes due in the form of increased healthcare costs, lost workdays due to illness, and a diminished quality of life. This is an economic transfer of wealth, from our collective health to a company’s bottom line.

$53.5M+
Total Potential Penalties

The law provides for steep financial penalties for this kind of behavior. The complaint filed by the United States asks the court to assess penalties up to $5,761 for each illegal device sold or installed. For the 849 days White’s Diesel failed to provide complete information to the EPA, the potential penalty is a staggering $57,617 per day. While the final amount is up to the court, the potential liability calculated from the government’s own numbers reveals the scale of the alleged violations. This isn’t a slap on the wrist; it’s the price of poison.

What Now?

The legal process will move forward, but public awareness is our strongest tool against this kind of corporate misconduct. Your health and the health of your community are on the line.

Corporate Leadership

  • Owner and President: Mr. Jake C. White

Regulatory Watchlist

  • Environmental Protection Agency (EPA): The federal body responsible for enforcing the Clean Air Act. Their investigations are crucial for holding polluters accountable.

The Resistance

This fight is bigger than one company. It’s about demanding that corporations respect our right to clean air. Support local environmental justice groups that monitor air quality in your community. Organize with your neighbors to advocate for stronger local enforcement and public health protections. The power to protect ourselves doesn’t come from government filings alone; it comes from collective, grassroots action.

The source document for this investigation is attached below.

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Aleeia
Aleeia

I'm Aleeia, the creator of this website.

I have 6+ years of experience as an independent researcher covering corporate misconduct, sourced from legal documents, regulatory filings, and professional legal databases.

My background includes a Supply Chain Management degree from Michigan State University's Eli Broad College of Business, and years working inside the industries I now cover.

Every post on this site was either written or personally reviewed and edited by me before publication.

Learn more about my research standards and editorial process by visiting my About page

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