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The distinguished tour receives a new twist
ofPatrik burning
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Zlatan Ibrahimovic’s Ferrari attracted a lot of attention in Stockholm this weekend.
There is only one problem.
Zlatan was driving the car illegally.
There was more than one person upside down when Zlatan Ibrahimovic drove along the Norrlandsgatan in Stockholm on Saturday 9 May in his only Ferrari Monza SP2. The car is manufactured in less than 500 copies and is only available to loyal and wealthy Ferrari customers.
Ferrari has not come out with a price tag on the car, but there has been information that it costs between SEK 25-30 million.
The problem for Zlatan is that he drove the car illegally.
Risking penny fines
According to a registration extract from the Swedish Transport Agency, Zlatan’s Ferrari has been suspended since March 30. The only time you can drive a stopped vehicle is “by the shortest route possible to or from the closest inspection.” However, Zlatan’s car was inspected on March 23 of this year.
Press manager for the Swedish Transport Agency Mikael Andersson confirms to Sportbladet that the car stopped and was therefore illegally driven when driven this weekend.
– Yes, this has been canceled and has been there since March 30, and you cannot drive a car if it is canceled, Andersson says.
Anyone who drives a stopped vehicle can be fined between 200 and 4000 SEK.
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