Calgary car owners 'not racing'

PABLO FERNANDEZ - Sun Media
Published: 15 08 2007

Exotic car owners lashed out at police yesterday after Mounties reported high-performance car owners are using rural highways near Calgary as race strips.

Several supercar owners are being investigated by police after recent incidents that have generated numerous witness reports of sports cars travelling in excess of 200 km/h and videos posted on the YouTube website showcasing the deeds.

Drivers who own such cars are responsible, contributing members of society who enjoy well-crafted machines, said exotic car seller Zahir Rana, of Calgary's ZR Auto, contradicting RCMP claims the autophiles are heading out to rural highways and pushing their wheels to the limit.

"These are professionals, they're lawyers, doctors, engineers ... who are out for coffee," said Rana.

"I think it's a ridiculous story and it needs to die."

Because of the way they're built and designed, the cars may give bystanders the impression of speed when they're not actually speeding, said Rana.

"They're not out racing -- racing is what kids with no brains do," he said.

"These cars look fast, they sound fast, but how do they know how fast they were going? The police haven't seen them going that fast."

High River RCMP Sgt. Larry Marzinzik said the grounds for their investigation are solid.

"We have nothing that could lead us to believe that any of this information may have been fabricated or that we have been misled by any of the information we've received," he said. "We're not out to get anybody -- we're just acting on the information that we've been given."

On Sunday, RCMP said witnesses called them to report three Ferraris and one Lamborghini zipping around roads south of Calgary at speeds near 200 km/h. RCMP stopped and questioned the drivers and continue to investigate.

Meanwhile, a video posted on YouTube and produced by ZR Auto apparently shows two Ferraris and two Lamborghinis engaged in an all-out time trial down what appears to be an area straight secondary road, reaching top speeds ranging from 296 km/h to 339 km/h. Road signs are digitally removed from the video in an apparent attempt to disguise the location.

In the video, Rana is interviewed as saying, "at that time, I just wanted to go faster and faster. I just wanted to push and not give a damn about what the hell happened."

The video says the trial was conducted on a closed road, but Marzinzik said Alberta Infrastructure and Transportation have stated no highways had been closed to allow the time trials.

Rana, who refused to comment specifically about the video because it's under investigation, said the film is fiction and no more than a marketing tool.

"None of it is real ... it all could've been done in a studio," he said.

More Reviews

Test Drives

Mercedes C350 strikes heroic sport sedan stance

Test Drives

Cadillac SRX puts a premium on wagon

Test Drives

Lexus stakes luxury sport compact claim with...

Test Drives

Honda CR-V hasn't outgrown its britches

Test Drives

Best BMW 3 improves threefold on driving fun

Test Drives

Kia heads to Rio for sub-compact sedan competitor

Test Drives

Dodge Charger V6 is like a semi-Hemi

SUBSCRIBE or Unsubscribe