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Another Mercedes-AMG One Has Burned to the Ground

Another Mercedes-AMG One Has Burned to the Ground

The Drive5 days ago

The latest car news, reviews, and features.
The world is short yet another Mercedes-AMG One this week after what appeared to be a very public conflagration somewhere in Germany. As is typical with a situation like this, information is thin on the ground, but unless there's big money to be made in faking videos of obscure supercars catching fire, we're inclined to believe everything is on the up-and-up. @chrimbu
AMG ONE ein heisser Sportwagen 🤣, wäre besser ohne Lithium Ion Akku🤔🤷‍♂️ ♬ The Sound of Silence (CYRIL Remix) – Disturbed
It's hard to tell much from this low-res video, but the Exclusive Car Registry has several photos of the car prior to the mishap, along with some basic production data about the car itself. It's all crowdsourced, so take it with a grain of salt, but we'd buy that the exterior was Emerald Green Metallic before it was blackened by all that smoke. It's listed as a 2023 model, and the current description is as succinct, but exhaustive:
'Burnt down.'
That site's listing, plus the Mercedes' German license plate and Feuerwehr markings on the vehicle in the background (German for 'Fire Department') indicate that the incident took place in Germany.
Indeed.
As we noted off the top, this isn't the first AMG One that has apparently self-immolated. Back in May of 2023, another example caught fire inside a car transporter, leaving nothing but a carbon-glazed pile of rubble:
Um Mercedes-AMG ONE pegou fogo. A unidade estava no guincho, sendo rebocada no M6, em Staffordshire, quando explodiu em chamas.A Mercedes está investigando o incêndio no motor híbrido, que aconteceu quando seu motor estava desligado.
🗞️ | The Sun pic.twitter.com/6p4HLFhzut — Mercedes-AMG F1 Brasil 🇧🇷 (@MercedesAMGF1BR) May 22, 2023
Development of the electrified hypercar was a headache for AMG. Essentially, Mercedes-Benz asked its performance car division to wrap a street car body around a Formula 1 drivetrain. The company's engineers were well aware of the challenges it faced, but the unprecedented adaptation nonetheless ended up taking nearly a year longer than planned to develop.
If the early productions numbers are to be believed, Mercedes only built 275 of these for the general public. As an owner, that means the odds of your car catching fire are still less than 1 in 100—a risk most of us would be willing to take to say we own a 1,000-horsepower, 11,000-RPM monster that is essentially an F1 car for the street.
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On June 4, 2020, Braunschweig state prosecutor Wolters said, via Reuters, "We assume that the girl is dead. The public prosecutor's office in Braunschweig is investigating a 43-year-old German national on suspicion of murder." Wolters told the BBC days later, "We have evidence against the accused which leads us to believe that he really killed Madeleine but this evidence is not strong enough at the moment to take him to court." The prosecutor said the evidence was "strong enough to say that the girl is dead and strong enough to accuse a specific individual of murder—that strong." But, Wolter added, "One has to be honest and remain open to the possibility that our investigation could end without a charge, that it ends like the others have. We are optimistic it will be different for us but for that we need more information." To this day, the Metropolitan Police still classify the investigation into Madeleine's disappearance as a missing persons case. Over the years a handful of suspects have been named, including Gerry and Kate, who weren't formally cleared by Portuguese authorities until July 2008, about 10 months after police acknowledged there wasn't enough evidence to keep questioning the couple. "This is the only time in 13 years that police have been so specific about a suspect, down to the phone numbers, vehicles and particularly with a known individual," said Clarence Mitchell, a former BBC reporter who for awhile was the McCanns' full-time representative and still serves as a spokesman for the family. Gerry and Kate "were coping as best as they can but want the focus to remain on the police investigation," Mitchell said, adding, "They still remain hopeful." Kate told Sky News in 2017, "You don't realize how strong you are until you have no option, and I think that's very true. Obviously massive events like this cause a lot of reaction, a lot of trauma and upset, but ultimately you have to keep going. And especially when you've got other children involved." "I think before Madeleine was taken, we felt we had managed to achieve a little perfect nuclear family of five," added Gerry, with a small smile. He cleared his throat. "And we had that for a short adapt and you have a new normality and, unfortunately for us, our new normality at the minute is a family of four." (Originally published June 17, 2020, at 7 a.m. PT) Robert Murat—a British national who lived not far from the Ocean Club and had volunteered to aid in the search for Madeleine when she first went missing—ended up winning upward of $750,000 in defamation damages from four U.K. media groups for coverage in their newspapers that strongly insinuated he was guilty of something. "It is hard to describe how utterly despairing it was to be named arguidos and subsequently portrayed in the media as suspects in our own daughter's abduction," Kate said at a news conference when she and her husband were officially cleared. "It has been equally devastating to witness the detrimental effect this status has had on the search for Madeleine."Local authorities conducted a sweeping raid in Portugal on dozens of properties linked to around 80 suspected pedophiles in 2007, but "Operation Predator," as it was called, did not result in any substantive leads in the McCann case. In 2012, Scotland Yard said it had identified 38 persons of interest in the case, including 12 Britons. By October 2013 it was 41, including 15 British nationals. Tips came in from all over the world, as did alleged sightings of Madeleine from as far away as India and New Zealand. In 2014, Metropolitan Police announced "a potential linked series of 12 crimes which occurred between 2004 and a male access to mainly holiday villas occupied by U.K. families on holiday in the western Algarve." NBC News reported in March 2014 that police were asking for the public's help identifying the perpetrator, whom they described as "having an interest in young white girls." Detectives said that in four of the cases being investigated, the man was believed to have sexually assaulted five girls between the ages of 7 and 10 years old while they were in their beds. The suspect was further described as "tan, with messy short dark hair," and he spoke English with a foreign accent. Prosecutors in the German city of Stade said in June 2020 that the newly announced suspect was also being investigated in connection with the 2015 disappearance of 5-year-old girl—identified as Inga G.—from the woods outside a family party being held in the town of Stendal, about 60 miles west of Berlin. "It is being assessed whether there is a connection between the two cases," a spokesperson for the prosecutors' office said. Though the update was disturbing, a spokesperson for the McCann family told NBC News at the time it also felt like the most "significant" development in the case to date. "This is the only time in 13 years that police have been so specific about a suspect, down to the phone numbers, vehicles and particularly with a known individual," said Clarence Mitchell, a former BBC reporter who for awhile was the McCanns' full-time representative and still serves as a spokesman for the family. Gerry and Kate "were coping as best as they can but want the focus to remain on the police investigation," Mitchell said, adding, "They still remain hopeful." Kate told Sky News in 2017, "You don't realize how strong you are until you have no option, and I think that's very true. Obviously massive events like this cause a lot of reaction, a lot of trauma and upset, but ultimately you have to keep going. And especially when you've got other children involved." "I think before Madeleine was taken, we felt we had managed to achieve a little perfect nuclear family of five," added Gerry, with a small smile. He cleared his throat. "And we had that for a short adapt and you have a new normality and, unfortunately for us, our new normality at the minute is a family of four." (Originally published June 17, 2020, at 7 a.m. PT) For the latest breaking news updates, click here to download the E! News App

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