Last month's
high-speed crash involving a Ferrari Enzo in the Malibu area
of California is
still making network TV headlines across the USA, with
reports now surfacing that an on-board videotape was being shot at
the time of the controversial accident. This report is courtesy of the LA
Times last Thursday:
The Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department's investigation
into a mysterious crash that destroyed a rare U$1-million
Ferrari in Malibu last month is now focusing on a videotape
that was purportedly shot from inside the vehicle at the
time of the accident, according to sources close to the
case. The sources said that Ferrari owner Stefan Eriksson
and the other man in the car, identified by authorities as
Trevor Karney, had a video camera rolling as they raced on
Pacific Coast Highway on the morning of Feb. 21 at speeds in
excess of 162 mph. Deputies who arrived at the scene did not
recover any video equipment. But sources said detectives
were later told that the high-speed driving was taped. The
sources spoke on the condition of anonymity because the case
is under investigation.
The revelation is the latest twist in a crash that has
prompted both an accident investigation and a probe by the
Sheriff's Department's Homeland Security Division. Although
no one was injured in the crash, the investigation has
generated significant attention because of the strange
circumstances and the fact that it destroyed one of only 400
Enzo Ferraris ever made.
Eriksson, a former European video game executive, told
deputies who arrived at the scene that he was not the driver
and that another man, named Dietrich, was behind the wheel.
Eriksson said Dietrich fled the scene. But detectives have
always been sceptical of his version of events.
Investigators have taken a swab of Eriksson's saliva to
match his DNA against blood found on the driver's side air
bag of the Ferrari. Eriksson also told deputies that he was
a deputy commissioner of the police department of a tiny
transit agency in the San Gabriel Valley. A few minutes
after the crash, two men arrived at the crash scene,
identified themselves as homeland security officers and
spoke to Eriksson at length before leaving. Sheriff's Sgt.
Phil Brooks said Wednesday that a few weeks before the
accident, Eriksson was pulled over in West Hollywood without
a driver's license.
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Sources claim that the Ferrari Enzo owner Stefan
Eriksson and the other man in the car, identified by
authorities as Trevor Karney, had a video camera
rolling as they raced on Pacific Coast Highway on
the morning of February 21st at speeds in excess of
162 mph. Deputies who arrived at the scene did not
recover any video equipment. But sources said
detectives were later told that the high-speed
driving was taped. |
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Last month's high-speed crash involving a Ferrari
Enzo in California is still making TV headiness
across the USA, with reports how surfacing that an
on-board videotape was being shot at the time of the
crash. |
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At that time Eriksson told
police officers that he was a deputy police commissioner of the
anti-terrorism unit of the San Gabriel Valley Transit
Authority and showed a badge, Brooks said.
Before coming to the U.S., Eriksson lived in England.
According to Noel Hogan, a British private investigator,
formerly with Scotland Yard, Eriksson once told him that he
was a police officer. Hogan had been trying to recover a
Mercedes SLR worth more than US$450,000 that had been
reported stolen in England and which Eriksson had in his
possession.
Officials at the transit agency, which provides
transportation for the disabled and elderly from Monrovia,
said Eriksson was given the title of deputy police
commissioner after undergoing a background check and
offering the agency free video security cameras for its five
buses. Eriksson left video game machine manufacturer
Gizmondo last fall after a Swedish newspaper printed
allegations of his criminal past. Brooks said Swedish police
have informed sheriff's investigators that Eriksson served
five years in prison in the early 1990s for a
counterfeiting-related crime. Gizmondo, which hoped to
compete with Sony and Nintendo gaming machines, earlier this
year filed for bankruptcy amid more than US$200 million in
debts.
An animated re-creation of the crash made available to The
Times on Thursday shows the driver of the Ferrari losing
control, veering right off the road and then travelling a
considerable distance before hitting a power pole and
splitting the sports car in half. "Anyone in that was lucky
to survive," Brooks said. He said officials were aware that
a Scottish bank has claimed that it owns the Ferrari.
Eriksson could face several charges if deputies determine he
was driving, including reckless driving, driving while
intoxicated and lying to investigators. In the aftermath of
the crash, his blood-alcohol level was found to be 0.09 pct,
above the 0.08 pct legal limit. Eriksson could not be
reached for comment.
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