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Weakland’s Mechanic Shop Cashed In on Corporate Pollution While Communities Breathed the Cost

A mechanic shop in rural Pennsylvania systematically stripped pollution controls from 122 trucks and cars and sold 190 illegal defeat devices designed to make those vehicles pump out toxic exhaust unchecked — then told federal regulators it simply couldn’t afford to pay the full fine.


The Facts

The Business Model Was Simple: Gut the Filters, Pocket the Cash

From January 2019 through July 2020, Weakland’s Mechanic Shop, Inc. at 144 Eckenrode Mill Road in Chest Springs, Pennsylvania ran what amounts to a pollution-for-profit operation. The shop charged customers to rip out or disable the exact systems that car and truck manufacturers were legally required to install to keep the air clean. This wasn’t an accident or an oversight. The EPA’s own enforcement documents confirm the shop knowingly performed this work.

The specific systems Weakland’s targeted were not minor components. Exhaust Gas Recirculation systems reduce nitrogen oxide emissions formed during high-temperature fuel combustion. Diesel Particulate Filters trap toxic soot particles before they exit the tailpipe. Selective Catalytic Reduction systems chemically convert nitrogen oxides into harmless nitrogen and water. Diesel Oxidation Catalysts reduce carbon monoxide and hydrocarbon emissions. These are the last lines of defense between a diesel engine and the lungs of every person in the vehicle’s vicinity.

The shop used two primary methods. First, “ECM flashing”: reprogramming the vehicle’s electronic control module, the brain of the car, to tell the engine to stop running its own pollution controls. Second, installing physical hardware components specifically engineered to bypass or destroy these same systems. Both approaches produced the same result: vehicles that passed from the shop back onto public roads producing significantly more toxic pollution than the law allows.

“From January 2019 through July 2020, Weakland’s knowingly removed or rendered inoperative emissions-related elements of design on at least 122 unique motor vehicles.”

312 Violations. One Shop. Eighteen Months.

The EPA counted each tampered vehicle and each sold defeat device as a separate, individual violation of the Clean Air Act. The final tally: 122 violations for tampering with emissions systems, and 190 violations for selling and installing defeat devices, totaling 312 federal violations across roughly 18 months of operation. At the statutory penalty ceiling of $5,580 per violation, the EPA could have theoretically pursued up to $1,740,960 (enough to fully fund the salaries of about 27 average Pennsylvania workers for an entire year). The actual settlement landed at $90,000.

Weakland’s Mechanic Shop: Violations & Penalty Comparison Number of Violations 0 50 100 150 200 122 Tampering Violations 190 Defeat Device Violations 312 ▲ Total Violations (bar truncated) Scale: 0–200 violations. Total bar truncated at 200 for display; actual value is 312.
Violations documented by the EPA across the January 2019–July 2020 enforcement period. Each bar represents a separate category of Clean Air Act violations.

The Non-Financial Ledger

What Money Can’t Measure: The Real Cost of 312 Gutted Vehicles

When a mechanic removes a Diesel Particulate Filter from a truck, the truck doesn’t just run differently. It becomes a rolling pollution source that the law explicitly prohibited. Every mile that vehicle travels after the DPF is gone, it releases fine particulate matter directly into the air at levels that were specifically banned because scientists and regulators determined those levels caused real, measurable harm to human health. The communities near those roads, the kids waiting at school bus stops, the elderly residents sitting on porches, the farmworkers in adjacent fields: none of them consented to breathe what Weakland’s set loose.

The pollutants at issue here are not abstract. Nitrogen oxides contribute to the formation of ground-level ozone and smog, triggering asthma attacks, aggravating chronic lung conditions, and increasing susceptibility to respiratory infections. Particulate matter, especially the ultra-fine particles that diesel engines produce, penetrates deep into lung tissue and enters the bloodstream, linking to cardiovascular disease, stroke, and premature death. Carbon monoxide displaces oxygen in the blood. These are not fringe scientific claims; they are the foundational reason the Clean Air Act’s Title II vehicle emissions standards exist in the first place.

Weakland’s did this to at least 122 vehicles through ECM hacking alone. Each of those vehicles likely drove thousands of miles after the shop finished its work. The EPA’s enforcement documents offer no estimate of total additional pollution released, no accounting of cumulative emission increases, no tally of how many people lived downwind of how many of those 122 vehicles. That data gap is itself a statement about how the system treats the communities on the receiving end of this kind of violation: their exposure doesn’t get a line item in the settlement.

“The shop charged customers to destroy the exact systems that federal law required manufacturers to install — and then sent those vehicles back out onto public roads.”

The Defeat Device Economy: Who Profits, Who Pays

The 190 defeat devices Weakland’s sold represent a secondary, calculated business line. These were physical parts whose principal purpose, as the EPA documents specifically state, was to bypass, defeat, or render inoperative the pollution controls on diesel vehicles. The shop sold and installed them knowing what they were for. This wasn’t a customer who walked in with a device and asked for installation without explanation. The EPA’s standard requires that the seller either knew or should have known what the device was being used for. Federal regulators concluded Weakland’s met that threshold.

Someone drove away from Weakland’s Mechanic Shop on 190 separate occasions with a vehicle newly equipped to pollute above legal limits. Those customers may not have understood the public health implications. They may have simply wanted more horsepower, or wanted to avoid a failed emissions inspection, or been sold on the idea that the factory pollution controls were hurting their engine performance. The person who made those sales happen and who installed those devices made a business decision: the revenue was worth more than the clean air those systems protected.


Legal Receipts

Straight From the Document: The Words They Signed


Societal Impact

Follow the Exhaust: Who Absorbs the Cost

Public Health: Breathing Is Supposed to Be Free

The Clean Air Act’s Title II vehicle emission standards exist because Congress and federal scientists determined that mobile sources of air pollution, specifically cars and trucks, produce pollutants at levels that cause demonstrable harm to human health. The EPA’s own consent document identifies the key pollutants by name: non-methane hydrocarbons, particulate matter, nitrogen oxides, and carbon monoxide. These are the exact pollutants that Weakland’s pollution-control removal allowed to flow freely from those 122 tampered vehicles and 190 defeat-device-equipped vehicles.

Nitrogen oxides are a precursor to ground-level ozone formation. Ozone at ground level is not the protective layer you learned about in school; it is a lung irritant that triggers asthma attacks, inflames airways, and reduces lung capacity. Particulate matter from diesel exhaust, particularly fine and ultrafine particles, passes through the respiratory system into the bloodstream and has been linked by the EPA and major medical institutions to cardiovascular disease, stroke, lung cancer, and premature death. The people most vulnerable to these exposures are children, the elderly, and people who already live with respiratory or cardiovascular conditions — the populations least able to absorb the cost of someone else’s profit motive.

Chest Springs, Pennsylvania sits in Cambria County, a rural area where residents have limited ability to simply avoid roadways where tampered vehicles operate. There is no “choose a cleaner route” option in a small rural community. The pollution from these vehicles entered the shared air without the consent of anyone who breathed it, and the $90,000 penalty paid to the federal government does nothing to compensate those people directly.

Economic Inequality: The Fine Was Smaller Than the Harm

The statutory penalty ceiling for each of the 312 violations was $5,580 per violation. Multiply that out and the maximum potential penalty exposure was $1,740,960 (enough to pay for approximately 19,344 months of average Pennsylvania rent, or roughly 1,612 years of rent for one family). The EPA settled for $90,000 (enough to pay a Pennsylvania median household for about two and a half years), specifically because the shop demonstrated it could not pay more. The mechanism that was supposed to make pollution economically painful instead became negotiable based on the polluter’s own financial disclosures.

The communities that absorbed the pollution from 312 violations received zero direct compensation in this settlement. The $90,000 (plus $1,700 in interest, totaling $91,700, about what a mid-career nurse earns in a year) goes to the United States Treasury, not to any remediation fund, not to any local health program, not to any affected resident. The financial structure of the Clean Air Act’s civil penalty system means the corporation’s economic hardship is a mitigating factor but the community’s health exposure is not a compensating factor. That asymmetry is a design feature, not a bug.

Maximum Possible Penalty vs. Actual Settlement Penalty Amount (USD) $0 $500K $1M $1.5M $1,740,960 Max Possible Penalty $90,000 Actual Settlement 94.8% reduction Max based on $5,580 × 312 violations. Actual settlement per EPA Consent Agreement.
The gap between what the law allowed the EPA to collect and what it actually collected tells you who the system protects.

Environmental Degradation: The Atmosphere Doesn’t Issue Receipts

Every one of the 122 tampered vehicles left Weakland’s shop with its exhaust recirculation, particulate filtration, and catalytic reduction systems either disabled or destroyed. Those systems do not have an off-season. Every ignition cycle, every mile of driving, every hour idling in traffic produced exhaust that federal standards prohibit precisely because of cumulative atmospheric damage. Nitrogen oxides don’t just hurt lungs; they react with sunlight and other compounds to form ground-level ozone and secondary particulate matter, spreading the harm far beyond the vehicle’s immediate vicinity.

The 190 defeat devices Weakland’s sold extended this damage further. Each device was specifically engineered to prevent pollution controls from functioning. Once installed, those devices keep working every day the vehicle operates. The EPA’s enforcement action covers a window of January 2019 to July 2020, but the vehicles and the defeat devices don’t disappear when the enforcement window closes. They keep driving. The atmospheric damage from 312 documented violations accumulated over months and years beyond the period the settlement addresses, with zero environmental remediation required under the terms of this consent agreement.


The Math of It

The “Cost of a Violation” Metric

$288.46
The average cost paid per Clean Air Act violation in this settlement
($90,000 ÷ 312 total violations)

Compare: The statutory ceiling was $5,580 per violation
Weakland’s paid 5.2 cents on the dollar of maximum exposure

$90,000 total penalty
(roughly what a Pennsylvania teacher earns across 2.5 years of full-time work)
EPA Payment Plan: Three Installments Payment 1 $30,566.66 Within 30 days $0 interest Payment 2 $30,566.67 Within 150 days $1,000 interest Payment 3 $30,566.67 Within 210 days $700 interest Total: $91,700.00 (principal $90,000 + interest $1,700) at 3% per annum
Weakland’s Mechanic Shop received a payment plan with three installments over seven months. The EPA determined the shop could not pay the full amount at once.

What Now?

Who Answers For This. What You Can Do.

The People Who Signed

  • Michael Weakland, President — Weakland’s Mechanic Shop, Inc. Signed the Consent Agreement on behalf of the corporation.
  • Karen Melvin, Director — EPA Region 3 Enforcement and Compliance Assurance Division. Signed for the EPA.
  • Jennifer M. Abramson, Senior Assistant Regional Counsel — EPA Region 3. Lead attorney for the complainant.

The Watchlist: Regulatory Bodies With Jurisdiction

  • EPA Region 3 — The regional office that brought this enforcement action. File complaints about vehicle emissions tampering at your local mechanic at epa.gov/enforcement/report-environmental-violation.
  • EPA Office of Transportation and Air Quality — Oversees Clean Air Act Title II mobile source standards. Monitors defeat device enforcement nationally.
  • Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection — State-level environmental enforcement with concurrent jurisdiction over air quality violations.
  • DOJ Environment and Natural Resources Division — Can pursue criminal referrals in cases of knowing Clean Air Act violations that exceed the civil threshold.

What You Can Actually Do Right Now

If you live near a mechanic shop and you know or suspect they’re selling defeat devices or doing ECM tuning to disable emissions systems, you can report it directly to the EPA at epa.gov/enforcement/report-environmental-violation. You do not need evidence, a lawyer, or a formal complaint process. A tip is enough to trigger an inquiry. Connect with local air quality advocacy organizations and mutual aid networks in your county. Share this story with people in rural communities who may not know that the emissions controls on their neighbors’ trucks directly affect the air their kids breathe. The EPA’s enforcement budget is limited and politically pressured. Public pressure, organized local advocacy, and documented complaint filings are the mechanisms that keep cases like this from being quietly closed without consequence. The shop walks away with a payment plan. The community doesn’t get one.


The source document for this investigation is attached below.

The consent agreement between the EPA and Weakland’s Mechanic Shop in PA can be found on the EPA’s website: https://www.epa.gov/system/files/documents/2024-06/weaklandsmechanicshopinc24.pdf

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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.

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