Mystery Deepens In Ferrari
Crashabc7.com
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Malibu, California (US):
The plot continues to thicken 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.
Mar 03, 2006
Crashabc7.com
__________
Malibu, California (US):
The plot continues to thicken 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.
Mar 03, 2006