Ferrari crash mystery deepens, including yacht, gun and 'officers'
abc13.com
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Malibu, California (US):
The plot continues to thicken as authorities try to unravel who was driving an exotic $1 million Ferrari that was traveling at an estimated 162 mph when it hit a power pole along Pacific Coast Highway and all but disintegrated.
Then there's the matter of a loaded gun clip found at the crash scene, a $14 million yacht listed as a home address and a pair of mysterious men who showed up after the crash and identified themselves as "homeland security" officers."It's like a James Bond story," Sgt. Philip Brooks of the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department said last Thursday.
"But I just want to find out who was driving the Ferrari."Stefan Eriksson, who owned the red Ferrari Enzo -- one of only 400 made -- escaped the Feb. 21 crash with only a cut lip.Authorities said Eriksson told them he was a passenger in the car and that the driver, a German acquaintance he only knew as Dietrich, ran into the nearby hills.
Deputies launched a three-hour foot and helicopter search but failed to turn up Dietrich.
Mar 06, 2006
abc13.com
_______
Malibu, California (US):
The plot continues to thicken as authorities try to unravel who was driving an exotic $1 million Ferrari that was traveling at an estimated 162 mph when it hit a power pole along Pacific Coast Highway and all but disintegrated.
Then there's the matter of a loaded gun clip found at the crash scene, a $14 million yacht listed as a home address and a pair of mysterious men who showed up after the crash and identified themselves as "homeland security" officers."It's like a James Bond story," Sgt. Philip Brooks of the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department said last Thursday.
"But I just want to find out who was driving the Ferrari."Stefan Eriksson, who owned the red Ferrari Enzo -- one of only 400 made -- escaped the Feb. 21 crash with only a cut lip.Authorities said Eriksson told them he was a passenger in the car and that the driver, a German acquaintance he only knew as Dietrich, ran into the nearby hills.
Deputies launched a three-hour foot and helicopter search but failed to turn up Dietrich.
Mar 06, 2006