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Volkswagen customers sound off on Twitter

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When looking to buy a new car three years ago, Priya Shah and her husband wanted something that got good gas mileage, but they weren't crazy about any of the hybrid vehicles on the market.

The 2012 Volkswagen Jetta SportWagen seemed like a good option. The couple had wanted a station wagon so that they could take their dog on road trips, and they didn't do a lot of city driving around their home in San Francisco, where a hybrid would be better.

On Friday, Shah was furious to hear that federal and state regulators have accused VW of using software that cheats pollution testing by sidestepping emission standards in recent diesel models, including Shah's Jetta.

"It's just a blatant disregard and intentional manipulation of the system," said Shah, 32. "That's just a whole other level of not only lying to the government, but also lying to your consumer because a lot of people buy diesel cars from VW because they feel they are clean diesel cars, and they are told they are clean diesel cars."

The German automaker eventually will have to recall all of the vehicles and change the emissions systems at its own expense, regulators said.

The affected diesel models include: Jetta (model years 2009-2015), Beetle (model years 2009-2015), Audi A3 (model years 2009-2015), Golf (model years 2009-2015) and Passat (model years 2014-2015).

Shah, a postdoctoral researcher at UC San Francisco, said she will "absolutely" take her Jetta back when it is recalled.

"I don't want to be spewing noxious gases into the environment," she said.

Shah said she doesn't plan to buy a VW again.

"Unless they release a hybrid that we're excited about, or a fully electric [car] that we're excited about," Shah said. "The diesels — they've lost my trust on that."

Customers like Shah took to Twitter to voice their anger at Volkswagen.

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