high speed stolen Ferrari = bad
Man Dies Behind the Wheel of Stolen Ferrari F430 After High-Speed Joyride Goes Wrong - The Drive
two upsetting things about this 1. A Ferrari was destroyed. 2. The Dealership has to lawyer up b/c his family will sue |
I like dead criminals.
darcy |
There's always a law suit... Sad.
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Sue for what. He stole a car and crashed. His family ain't gona win anything. If anything the female passenger should sue that idiots family. Play stupid games win stupid prizes . Once the police download the data off the ECU of the Ferrari I'm sure it will go even farther in proving that guy is a moron.
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too bad the dealer's insurance company will have to pay up and his rates will skyrocket, rather than collecting from the thief. Too bad they can't do like the Israeli military and destroy the family home of the thief, lol.
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Originally Posted by superchargedk20
(Post 24572548)
Sue for what. He stole a car and crashed. His family ain't gona win anything. If anything the female passenger should sue that idiots family. Play stupid games win stupid prizes . Once the police download the data off the ECU of the Ferrari I'm sure it will go even farther in proving that guy is a moron.
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Originally Posted by superchargedk20
(Post 24572548)
Sue for what. He stole a car and crashed. His family ain't gona win anything.
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Originally Posted by mosesbotbol
(Post 24572814)
I bet the family will get money from the dealership. They could contend they shouldn't have let him test drive to start with or something like that.
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I think the parents are hoping the dealership's insurance company writes a check to get them off their back.
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I hate to derail the paranoia, but the family would have the worst possible wrongful death suit one could have. Colorado imposes a harsh damages cap on wrongful death cases and uses the doctrine of modified comparative fault. There would have to be an overt act of negligence on the part of the dealership that would have to significantly outweigh the many acts of contributory negligence of the decedent. Someone mentioned that the dealership may be his employer. If that hypothetical were real, then the family would be further barred by workers' compensation immunity.
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