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-   -   Enzo PCH Redux (http://forums.pelicanparts.com/showthread.php?t=269546)

Howard Agency 03-03-2006 09:32 AM

Enzo PCH Redux
 
The story keeps getting better. One report tells of finding a clip from a Glock 40MM. 40mm? Bofors? And from ABC7.com:

MALIBU - The plot continues to thicken today in the mystery surrounding the crash of a $1 million Ferrari on Pacific Coast Highway in Malibu, a sheriff's sergeant said.
"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 only found 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 yesterday.

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 40mm Glock which had been stuffed under the car seat and reported it to us," Brooks said.

Brooks said that 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 Carl Freer.

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 million dollar Ferrari, which is regarded as one of the finest race cars ever made.

Brooks told ABC7 that if it is determined that Eriksson was indeed the Ferrari driver, the most he could be charged with is possibly misdemeanor DUI and reckless driving, along with providing false information to authorities.



The best part, a mere $200,000 to $300,000 to fix it.

motion 03-03-2006 09:36 AM

$200k-$300k, LOL. Good one. Gotta wonder where these reporters get their info...

widebody911 03-03-2006 09:38 AM

They're expending an awful lot of effort on this. If it was Joe Sixpack in a b!tchin Camaro, nobody would GAFF irrespective of the speed.

Howard Agency 03-03-2006 09:48 AM

My favorite...

"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.

VaSteve 03-03-2006 10:51 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by widebody911
They're expending an awful lot of effort on this. If it was Joe Sixpack in a b!tchin Camaro, nobody would GAFF irrespective of the speed.
Seriously. The guy crashed *his* $1M car into a pole. Pay for the pole, sweep the bits into an envelope which he can take home and let's all move on with our lives.

If nobody is hurt but the driver, his ego and wallet is there really a crime to investigate?

Tervuren 03-03-2006 12:34 PM

Quote:

Originally posted by motion
$200k-$300k, LOL. Good one. Gotta wonder where these reporters get their info...
The Enzo is built to take break where its hit, the entire car need not be replaced in a hard hit. My 944 on the other hand, crunches the entire car in a hard hit, and is much more expensive relative to the value of the car.

Also keep in mind, an Enzo's 1 Million value comes from the fact someone cannot just buy an Enzo, thats significantly more then they cost new. Ferrari's markup is I think close to 50% on a car, so that repair cost doesn't surprise me at all.

RickM 03-03-2006 12:38 PM

Quote:

Originally posted by Tervuren
Ferrari's markup is I think close to 50% on a car, so that repair cost doesn't surprise me at all.

50% markup on what?

84porsche 03-03-2006 12:58 PM

When they put the car back together, they are going to be missing a hose. :D

Noah930 03-03-2006 01:14 PM

Quote:

When they put the car back together, they are going to be missing a hose.
ROTFLMAO

motion 03-03-2006 02:22 PM

Quote:

Originally posted by Tervuren
The Enzo is built to take break where its hit, the entire car need not be replaced in a hard hit. My 944 on the other hand, crunches the entire car in a hard hit, and is much more expensive relative to the value of the car.

Also keep in mind, an Enzo's 1 Million value comes from the fact someone cannot just buy an Enzo, thats significantly more then they cost new. Ferrari's markup is I think close to 50% on a car, so that repair cost doesn't surprise me at all.

Tervuren - Take a close look at the crash photos. Now factor in labor and replacement part costs (both much higher than actual assembly costs). I know someone in the area who put his $350,000 F40 into a pole a few months ago. Repair cost: $200,000. And it wasn't hurt NEARLY as much as this Enzo.

Hehehehe... good one Chris :)

mudman 03-03-2006 02:51 PM

Quote:

Originally posted by VaSteve
Seriously. The guy crashed *his* $1M car into a pole. Pay for the pole, sweep the bits into an envelope which he can take home and let's all move on with our lives.

If nobody is hurt but the driver, his ego and wallet is there really a crime to investigate?

and
"They're expending an awful lot of effort on this. If it was Joe Sixpack in a b!tchin Camaro, nobody would GAFF irrespective of the speed."

I agree with the above, but you have to admit that this makes for good entertainment!
-Jeremy

Tervuren 03-03-2006 06:13 PM

Quote:

Originally posted by motion
Tervuren - Take a close look at the crash photos. Now factor in labor and replacement part costs (both much higher than actual assembly costs). I know someone in the area who put his $350,000 F40 into a pole a few months ago. Repair cost: $200,000. And it wasn't hurt NEARLY as much as this Enzo.

Hehehehe... good one Chris :)

The F40 was not designed that way. On a forum I visit there is a guy who works at an official Ferrari work shop, one of the fe places Ferrari will sell the stuff to fix something like this. That is what he said about an Enzo on one that chrashed some time ago in Florida. (The one posted as part of a fake news story on teenage driver's here a wee bit ago).

Rick, Ferrari's profit margin on a car, even including development costs, is very very very high. I'd have to check, but I think they made somewhere between 100-200K on each F40, including costs to design/produce and tooling for the car.

The F40 does not use the compartmentalized design of the Enzo, a hit with it can put the entire car out of whack, same as when my 944 was schrunched. The Enzo, areas snap and break, and those that don't, likely do not need fixing/replacing. An F40, you have to unbend the car.

scottmandue 03-04-2006 10:16 AM

Isn't obvious...

The driver was abducted by aliens!

You guys should get out more often.

http://www.pelicanparts.com/support/smileys/pint1.gif

VaSteve 03-04-2006 05:02 PM

Quote:

Originally posted by Wayne at Pelican Parts
F40s are 20 years old - the Enzo parts are probably still plenty in stock at the factory, as are the original molds, etc... They are still making them (Maserati MC12) too...

-Wayne

20 years.... Hard to belive it's been that long already... Wow

carnutzzz 03-05-2006 06:41 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by Howard Agency
My favorite...

"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.

Um, this whole thing is weird. Deputies were "overwhelmed" by a single car crash? I can see being overwhelmed during something like the WTC attack, but this?

Please.

jeffgrant 03-05-2006 11:28 AM

I'm sure the Homeland Security division is the big, bad, hidden, all-powerful group that smaller police forces are afraid of, so I'm thinking that's what might have had them overwhelmed.

84porsche 03-16-2006 08:08 AM

Guys,

Their is an animation video out on Yahoo news that shows how the Enzo split in half. It's quite cool. Wish I could post a link but I can't access the video links. Check it out.

http://www.yahoo.com/s/280417 - See if this works.

widebody911 03-16-2006 08:43 AM

That animation reminds me of Flight Similator circa 1990

jluetjen 03-16-2006 12:22 PM

Here's CNN's version of the story. It just goes to show that just because you're rich enough to own an Enzo (or a Porsche for that matter), doesn't mean that you're smart enough to drive it, nor honest enough to deserve it.

Anyone notice that this "Homeland Security Taskforce" agent has skipped the country that he's supposed to be protecting??? Too bad the pole didn't hit about 6 inches further forward in the car.

Sure, it was only a single car crash, but by the end of the day it sounds like it might escelate to...
- Speeding
- DUI
- Reckless Endangerment
- Fraud (?)
- Impersonating a federal agent

I'm no lawyer, but it sounds like this guy is a target rich environment for law enforcement officers.

techweenie 03-16-2006 01:42 PM

The story just gets better. Looks like there was a second person in the car, and he was videotaping.

Wonder what "World's Wildest Videos" will pay for that?!

Oh, and our hero, Stefan, was apparenty designated a 'law enforcement official' after providing video cameras to a transit agency. After passing a background check that apparently missed his prison sentence for counterfeiting.

All about it:

http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-ferrari16mar16,0,6869781.story?coll=la-home-headlines


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