In February, an 18-year-old broke through the surroundings of Kemaat am Innbach in Upper Austria at 132 km/h. After the official acceptance of his car, the vehicle must be auctioned, but is now too broken for the auction house.
Extreme rerrasers are taken away from their racing and forced in the extreme store, the selling price goes 70 percent to the Austrian Road Safety Fund. So it does not provide for the new speed law that has not been so new since March of the previous year.
BMW decreased legally
The BMW 118D from an 18-year-old lower Austrian should also run that way. Because the young steering wheel broke at 132 km/h in February through the area of Kemaat am Innbach. Three months later everything was official: the declaration of expiration legally binding, so, as reported, the vehicle will be ready for a shield.
It would only be the second shaving car car that turns its owner in the upper Austria into the auction house. But instead of under the hammer, the BMW could now land in the scrap press.
Wrack dealer is an alternative to the auction house
Because the 18-year-old had delivered a pursuit of approximately 27 kilometers with the Ried police in the Innk trip to Kema, then lost control of the vehicle and destroyed.
“The vehicle was quite damaged in the accident. An expert must first see if it can be auctioned,” says Rene Mühlböck, head of the security department of the responsible district administration Grieskirchen and Eferting. “The other option would be that the car was picked up by the wreck dealer.” In this case, the proceeds will be limited to the state treasury.
Source: Krone

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