Expensive Crash

On the radio, they said the man found with the car was the owner.

Supposedly met a guy at his home (a party), and went for a ride.

Suspiscious.


I guess they should up the safety requirements for all cars to that of the Enzo.

Well, as long as they require the ponies, too.
 
Some people just have too much money on their hands.

OK, OK. I'm jealous and I admit it. :)
 
Wonder if it was stolen or "borrowed". Or else the cops would simply look at the registration/VIN to find the owner.

Only driving 120mph? C'mon, my Honda can go that fast. I wish people who bought those high-end cars appreciated and utilized their vehicle's capabilities more. What a waste. :)

Best Wishes,
-Bob
 
Both airbags deployed as a result of the crash.

The owner of the car is claiming that he was the passenger.

He was found with a bloody nose.

The only blood that was found in the car was on the driver's side airbag.

Yeah, right, he was the passenger... :rolleyes:
 
Centaur said:
Both airbags deployed as a result of the crash.

The owner of the car is claiming that he was the passenger.

He was found with a bloody nose.

The only blood that was found in the car was on the driver's side airbag.

Yeah, right, he was the passenger... :rolleyes:
I think you have a point there, the story's pretty fishy.

I saw a Ferrari on the highway the other day. I've never given much thought to high end automobiles, don't really care about 'em. But when I got a look at that Ferrari up close and personal, zooming down the highway, I was pretty damn impressed. I can see why they cost the incredible amount of money they do.
 
Both airbags deployed as a result of the crash.
The owner of the car is claiming that he was the passenger.
He was found with a bloody nose.
The only blood that was found in the car was on the driver's side airbag.
Yeah, right, he was the passenger...
Aha. Now it makes sense. But would have the passenger airbag deploy if no one was in the seat? Many modern vehicles have weight detectors in the seats.

Would it make any difference to the insurance company? The car is covered by your own insurance no matter who's driving. Too bad he didn't run for the hills. Then he could file a stolen vehicle report. Hard to explain that someone stole your car and wrecked it when you're in the accident.

Maybe he lying solely to get out of a ticket? If so, the cops should send him a bill for the manhours spent searching the hills.

-Bob
 
Turns out the dude driving is a Swedish Director and was DUI at the time.

He is facing charges as we speak and could possibly also face the Death Penalty back in Sweden (if the government finds any improprieties in his tax returns :p )
 
Investigation has turned up alot of interesting tid bits:

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/11604891/

Mystery Of Crashed Ferrari Enzo Deepens
KNBC-TV
7:25 a.m. PST February 28, 2006
LOS ANGELES - The mystery in the case of last week's crash of a $1 million Ferrari Enzo on Pacific Coast Highway in Malibu is deepening. Feb. 23 Images

Los Angeles County sheriff's detectives told the Los Angeles Times that they believe a gun's magazine discovered near the wreckage is connected to the crash, and they plan to interview an unnamed person who they believe was in the car with Swedish game machine entrepreneur Stefan Eriksson.

The crash has also garnered the attention of a leading Scottish bank, which has informed sheriff's investigators that it may own the destroyed car, The Times reported.

At the same time, detectives are trying to figure out why another exotic car in Eriksson's extensive collection, a Mercedes SLR, was listed as stolen by Scotland Yard in London, Sheriff's Sgt. Phil Brooks told The Times.

The totaled Ferrari was one of two Enzos that Eriksson brought into the United States from England along with the Mercedes SLR, Brooks told the newspaper. But detectives have concluded that the totaled vehicle did not have appropriate papers and was not "street legal" in California.

Detectives have been trying to sort out what exactly happened last week ago, when Eriksson's Enzo -- one of only 400 ever made -- smashed into a telephone pole while moving at 162 miles an hour.

Eriksson told deputies he was the passenger and that a man he knew only as "Dietrich" was behind the wheel. But detectives noted that Eriksson had a bloody lip and that the only blood visible in the car was on the driver's-side air bag.
 
Hi All-
Centaur said:
"...Los Angeles County sheriff's detectives told the Los Angeles Times that they believe a gun's magazine discovered near the wreckage is connected to the crash, and they plan to interview an unnamed person who they believe was in the car with Swedish game machine entrepreneur Stefan Eriksson..."
At least the journalist used the correct term "magazine" instead of "clip" when arranging the follow-up story! :D

~ Blue Jays ~
 
Unfortunately it just takes money to buy a Ferrari not brains .All Ferrari owners are now crying when they see this .It's really a wonderfull high tech automobile.
 
This is from The LA Times,

Sheriff's officials are still trying to confirm witness reports that the Ferrari might have been drag racing with another car, and officials aren't sure if that's what happened.

Sheriff's officials said Eriksson was an executive with a game company that attempted to take on Sony and Nintendo, but the firm collapsed last year.

In Malibu, officials said they are not sure what to make of the accident.

Kearsley said the stretch of road was not known for drag racing, but for run-of-the-mill speeders. He said the Sheriff's Department has had success for the last year and a half using radar and lasers to catch overzealous drivers. The lasers are not detectable to drivers, he said.

"It's straight as an arrow where the accident was," he said. "You really have to go out of your way to hit a telephone pole."

Carol Moss, a longtime Malibu resident, activist and meditation group leader, said the accident came as no surprise.

"It was horrendous, but Malibu is full of idiots," she said. "There are a lot of wild cars and irresponsible people. The roads are dangerous. You always see people with those sorts of cars. You see some wild behavior."

But, in keeping with her Zen frame of mind, Moss extended an olive branch. "Everyone is welcome to attend the meditation group. Even the drag racer."
 
This just keeps getting better and better:

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/11646530/

Investigation Into Ferrari Crash On PCH Delivers Twists, Turns
KNBC-TV
7:08 p.m. PST March 2, 2006

LOS ANGELES - The plot continued to thicken Thursday in the mystery surrounding the crash of a $1 million Ferrari on Pacific Coast Highway in Malibu, a sheriff's sergeant said. Images

"It's like a James Bond story," said Sgt. Philip Brooks, of the Malibu/Lost Hills Station traffic detail. "But I just want to find out who was driving the Ferrari."

Brooks is heading up the investigation to find out if Stefan Eriksson, of Bel Air, was at the wheel of the red Ferrari Enzo when it crashed into a pole off Pacific Coast Highway on Feb. 21 at an estimated 160 mph.

The impact caused the car to split in half and nearly disintegrate, but Eriksson suffered relatively minor injuries.

A bloodied Eriksson was found in the passenger seat and told authorities that the driver was a German man named Dietrich who fled on foot into the Malibu hills.

"Yesterday, Eriksson came to the station with his attorney, David Eldon, and voluntarily provided a DNA sample taken with a mouth swab," Brooks said. "We want to see if his blood matches the blood in the Ferrari."

Results are expected for a few weeks.

The blood was found only on the driver's side of the car, not the passenger's side.

On the advice of his attorney, Eriksson did not make a statement Wednesday.

After the crash, Eriksson told deputies examining the wreckage that he had been a passenger in the Ferrari and there was a street race with a Mercedes.

Brooks said that Eriksson had told deputies of his friend Trevor, who was a passenger in the Mercedes.

"Based on the evidence, we don't believe there was a Mercedes or any race. There was a sole vehicle driving too fast on Pacific Coast Highway," Brooks said.

He has not been able to prove that Eriksson was the driver of that Ferrari.

But he said that "the plot thickened" as the investigation continued.

He said that Trevor -- he has a last name but is not releasing it -- said he was a friend of Eriksson and gave as his home address a boat slip in Marina del Rey.

The boat in that slip was a $14 million yacht, maybe the biggest in the harbor. And the name of the registered owner is Carl Freer.

Eriksson's name was linked by several European newspapers, including the Guardian of London, to Freer for their involvement in the collapse of a prominent video game company in Sweden in which investors lost millions of dollars. Eriksson was reportedly sentenced to a long prison sentence in that case.

Another unnerving development -- Trevor was at the scene of the accident on PCH and asked a good Samaritan to use his cell phone to report the crash, Brooks said.

"An hour later the good Samaritan found a magazine to a 40 mm Glock which had been stuffed under the car seat and reported it to us," Brooks said.

Brooks said the investigation also revealed that in September, Eriksson had brought two Ferrari Enzos into the country in San Diego -- one a red one and the other a black one. He also brought in a Mercedes SLR, a $600,000 vehicle.

Brooks said that the red Ferrari and the Mercedes have since been described as stolen, because the initial down payment on them was allegedly a fraudulent one through a company owned by Freer.

Federal authorities said Freer and Eriksson have connections to the Swedish mafia.

And then there's yet another wrinkle, Brooks said.

"At the scene of the accident, two associates of Eriksson showed up flashing badges from Homeland Security. Obviously, at the time the deputies were overwhelmed and didn't check out the badges. Eriksson also produced a business card describing himself as a deputy police commissioner with the San Gabriel Valley Transit," he said.

That entity is actually a privately owned security company, Brooks said. It consists of two vans used for paratransit working out of a garage across the street from the Monrovia Police Department.

The badges were apparently issued by the paratransit company, Brooks said.

Trevor told the deputies that Eriksson was part of the agency's anti-terrorism forces and that he was working on new facial recognition software for Homeland Security, Brooks said.

The sergeant said there was one additional piece of information.

The Ferrari company in Italy told Brooks it could fix the broken red Ferrari for a mere $200,000 to $300,000.

Many people had been upset at the destruction of the $1 million Ferrari, which is regarded as one of the finest cars ever made.

Brooks said that if it is determined that Eriksson was indeed the Ferrari driver, the most with which he could be charged is possibly misdemeanor DUI and reckless driving, along with providing false information to authorities.


More twists and turns than Lombard Street in San Francisco! ;)
 
this is really simple, arrest all the MF's. Including those posing as police as as Dept. of homeland security.
 
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