Stolen Ferrari found after 28 years
Discussion
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/sport/other/formula-one-...
My question is what will happen to it now? Does it go back to the original owner? There must be many hundreds of thousands invested in this vehicle so someone is going to lose their shirt big time!
My question is what will happen to it now? Does it go back to the original owner? There must be many hundreds of thousands invested in this vehicle so someone is going to lose their shirt big time!
It was detected at the point where a dealer here was about to sell it to a customer in the US. So I wonder whether that guy could still buy it and pay the insurance co rather than the dealer?
I wouldn't be surprised if the dealer here has no idea about the history and is about to lose a packet.
My understanding of insurance for cars of this sort of value was that they were not insured in the conventional sense but had some sort of indemnity bond or something like that? Probably talking utter nonsense but does it work the same as normal?
I wouldn't be surprised if the dealer here has no idea about the history and is about to lose a packet.
My understanding of insurance for cars of this sort of value was that they were not insured in the conventional sense but had some sort of indemnity bond or something like that? Probably talking utter nonsense but does it work the same as normal?
I remember reading about this at the time, in other on-line reports there is mention of a second Ferrari stolen that weekend.
IIRC it was Alesi ‘s 355.
What a lucky lad Gerhard was back then, ragging around the tracks in what I consider one of the best sounding and looking F1 cars - the 412T2.
And he had a cracking road car to boot!
IIRC it was Alesi ‘s 355.
What a lucky lad Gerhard was back then, ragging around the tracks in what I consider one of the best sounding and looking F1 cars - the 412T2.
And he had a cracking road car to boot!
Jim H said:
I remember reading about this at the time, in other on-line reports there is mention of a second Ferrari stolen that weekend.
IIRC it was Alesi ‘s 355.
What a lucky lad Gerhard was back then, ragging around the tracks in what I consider one of the best sounding and looking F1 cars - the 412T2.
And he had a cracking road car to boot!
I seem to remember reading that Berger left the keys in the ignition while he popped into a hotel. IIRC it was Alesi ‘s 355.
What a lucky lad Gerhard was back then, ragging around the tracks in what I consider one of the best sounding and looking F1 cars - the 412T2.
And he had a cracking road car to boot!
SpudLink said:
Jim H said:
I remember reading about this at the time, in other on-line reports there is mention of a second Ferrari stolen that weekend.
IIRC it was Alesi ‘s 355.
What a lucky lad Gerhard was back then, ragging around the tracks in what I consider one of the best sounding and looking F1 cars - the 412T2.
And he had a cracking road car to boot!
I seem to remember reading that Berger left the keys in the ignition while he popped into a hotel. IIRC it was Alesi ‘s 355.
What a lucky lad Gerhard was back then, ragging around the tracks in what I consider one of the best sounding and looking F1 cars - the 412T2.
And he had a cracking road car to boot!
So seems unlikely it was opportunistic although we do have a BBC inspired view of Mediterranean police investigations as lackadaisical and bungling so who really knows.
ambuletz said:
it made its way all the way to japan, how does something like that not get spotted?
I suspect 25 years ago shipping would be more of a paper-based exercise so you would have written XYZ on the paperwork instead of ABC. Gets to Japan and nobody knows anything of the previous history and has no way of finding out. ingenieur said:
ambuletz said:
it made its way all the way to japan, how does something like that not get spotted?
I suspect 25 years ago shipping would be more of a paper-based exercise so you would have written XYZ on the paperwork instead of ABC. Gets to Japan and nobody knows anything of the previous history and has no way of finding out. ingenieur said:
SpudLink said:
Jim H said:
I remember reading about this at the time, in other on-line reports there is mention of a second Ferrari stolen that weekend.
IIRC it was Alesi ‘s 355.
What a lucky lad Gerhard was back then, ragging around the tracks in what I consider one of the best sounding and looking F1 cars - the 412T2.
And he had a cracking road car to boot!
I seem to remember reading that Berger left the keys in the ignition while he popped into a hotel. IIRC it was Alesi ‘s 355.
What a lucky lad Gerhard was back then, ragging around the tracks in what I consider one of the best sounding and looking F1 cars - the 412T2.
And he had a cracking road car to boot!
So seems unlikely it was opportunistic although we do have a BBC inspired view of Mediterranean police investigations as lackadaisical and bungling so who really knows.
I’m stretching my memory back here folks, after all it is 28 years ago!
I was a huge fan of Gerhard and Ferrari at the time. My source of info was Autosport which I used to pour over every week. It was a sub-story that ran along the full GP report something like ‘Works Ferrari’s go AWOL at San Marino’.
I think Gerhard and Jean were staying at the same hotel, and the keys to the cars were left with the Valet. I seem to remember Gerhard originally thought it was the Valet moving the car out for him, then soon realised it wasn’t when the driver floored it passed him! It was then he realised he had the keys for the car in his pocket.
I think the cars were part of the drivers contract (not uncommon). At the time, and historically Ferrari never had a de facto number one driver - except the Schumacher years?
However, Gerhard had 512 TR and Jean a 355, make of that what you will?!
I was a huge fan of Gerhard and Ferrari at the time. My source of info was Autosport which I used to pour over every week. It was a sub-story that ran along the full GP report something like ‘Works Ferrari’s go AWOL at San Marino’.
I think Gerhard and Jean were staying at the same hotel, and the keys to the cars were left with the Valet. I seem to remember Gerhard originally thought it was the Valet moving the car out for him, then soon realised it wasn’t when the driver floored it passed him! It was then he realised he had the keys for the car in his pocket.
I think the cars were part of the drivers contract (not uncommon). At the time, and historically Ferrari never had a de facto number one driver - except the Schumacher years?
However, Gerhard had 512 TR and Jean a 355, make of that what you will?!
Edited by Jim H on Monday 4th March 15:38
Mr Pointy said:
ingenieur said:
ambuletz said:
it made its way all the way to japan, how does something like that not get spotted?
I suspect 25 years ago shipping would be more of a paper-based exercise so you would have written XYZ on the paperwork instead of ABC. Gets to Japan and nobody knows anything of the previous history and has no way of finding out. ingenieur said:
Mr Pointy said:
ingenieur said:
ambuletz said:
it made its way all the way to japan, how does something like that not get spotted?
I suspect 25 years ago shipping would be more of a paper-based exercise so you would have written XYZ on the paperwork instead of ABC. Gets to Japan and nobody knows anything of the previous history and has no way of finding out. Gassing Station | Motoring News | Top of Page | What's New | My Stuff