- 05 Apr 08, 06:45#38543
Interesting.
I guess he's talking about his party being filmed and exposed... otherwise, it's hard to believe he was expecting he's being taken to just another FIA function, finding himself drugged, filled with viagra and thrown into willing arms of 5 prostitutes.
This is completely wrong. It's like a caught thief thinking that his only mistake was being captured, not being thief in the first place.
That aside, I do think he was set up. Prostitutes should be professionals keeping quiet about their clients. If you expose one client, you'll loose many others... except if someone offers you loads of money, or if you dislike your client THAT much. Hey, who knows - maybe some of those ladies are McLaren supporters
The other think is, I tend to agree he was setup by newspapers. Tabloids do create news, and this was so easy as it even didn't have to be created - just exposed. And having a chance to expose high profile "celebrity" that most of Britain is hardly in love with, and in such a spicy way... priceless!
As if this 'episode' wasn't already damaging enough for F1, Max Mosley has reportedly blamed McLaren-Mercedes for a recent tabloid article relating to his alleged extra-curricular experiences, saying the team set him up.
Mosley has a tension-fraught history with the McLaren team, having slapped them with a £50million fine for last year's Stepneygate scandal in what some felt was his own personal vendetta against team boss Ron Dennis.
'Mosley has confided to friends he believes he may have been the victim of a plot by McLaren-Mercedes, who were fined £50million last year for 'spying' on Ferrari, to destroy his career,' reports the Daily Mail.
The newspaper went on to say that Mosley is determined to prove that he was set-up, which is why he has called an Extraordinary Meeting of the FIA.
However, it's not just Mosley who (allegedly) reckons he was set-up.
Bernie Ecclestone's immediate reaction after hearing the news was to say: "I find it difficult to believe. It's his business but it sounds to me like a set-up."
More telling is that BMW team boss Mario Theissen, who after five days to thinking about it, said on Friday that it did appear as if was entrapment.
"What shouldn't be neglected is it certainly looks like a trap," he said. "And that is something which in our view is not acceptable."
if this is true can this guy get any lower
Interesting.
I guess he's talking about his party being filmed and exposed... otherwise, it's hard to believe he was expecting he's being taken to just another FIA function, finding himself drugged, filled with viagra and thrown into willing arms of 5 prostitutes.
This is completely wrong. It's like a caught thief thinking that his only mistake was being captured, not being thief in the first place.
That aside, I do think he was set up. Prostitutes should be professionals keeping quiet about their clients. If you expose one client, you'll loose many others... except if someone offers you loads of money, or if you dislike your client THAT much. Hey, who knows - maybe some of those ladies are McLaren supporters

The other think is, I tend to agree he was setup by newspapers. Tabloids do create news, and this was so easy as it even didn't have to be created - just exposed. And having a chance to expose high profile "celebrity" that most of Britain is hardly in love with, and in such a spicy way... priceless!

You can have it in any colour - as long as it's black. Or red. Or blue. Or green. Or white. Or navy blue. Or...