Gizmondo Exec Involved In Car Crash

Clashman

Regular
Wow, these guys, above and beyond being thugs and criminals, are nutty drivers on top of it:

Story:
http://www.joystiq.com/2006/02/22/former-gizmondo-exec-involved-in-ferrari-enzo-crash/
Stefan Eriksson, the former executive officer of the now bankrupt Gizmondo Europe, who resigned from the company after it emerged that he was convicted of financial fraud in the mid-90s, was involved in a high speed car crash which totalled a $1 million Ferrari Enzo. Police in the Los Angeles district of Malibu said in a statement that the car was owned by Mr. Eriksson, but that he was not driving.

According to the former exec. a German man called Dietrich--who fled the scene--was driving the car. That's convenient considering that Mr. Eriksson's blood-alcohol level was above the legal limit. The car, which was travelling at around 192km/h, mounted an embankment, became airborne and was sheared in two on collision with a pole. Apparently the car was taking part in a street race with a Mercedes SLR, a $677,500 car.

So when Mr. Eriksson claimed to have left Gizmondo to "pursue new entrepreneurial ventures", he meant to say that he'd be throwing away a third of the $3 million in salary and bonuses he earned from his time at Gizmondo by getting involved in the writing off of his one million dollar car. Stefan Eriksson, with his mobster past and reckless attitude to his own life and others, is the sort of person the video games industry (or any industry for that matter) doesn't need.

Pics:
http://www.jalopnik.com/cars/news/more-on-the-enzo-incident-on-pch-with-photos-156121.php

Yikes! :oops:
 
Wow, whoever was driving this Car and got away uninjured should celebrate 2 birthdays a year.
God certainly loves morons.
 
Holy thread ressurection, Batman!

Anyway, the Gizmondo saga appears to be over, after he made a guilty plea for three and a half years.
Once he does leave jail, however, Eriksson will be deported from the United States. His masion in California has also been seized by the court, and it will now be sold in order to pay court costs and restitution to the banks involved in the affair.

All of which, presumably, puts a lid at last on the Gizmondo affair - which started out with what seemed to be an enthusiastic but naive console start-up, became something much more sinister when the involvement of organised crime elements and claims of shareholder intimidation were aired, and has finally come to a dramatic close with the high speed crash of an extremely rare sports car and a bizarre series of legal wrangles.
Sorry for the bump.
 
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