The Guardian (USA)

Christian Horner back in eye of F1 storm after email leaks alleged messages

- Giles Richards in Bahrain

The opening of the new Formula One season was dramatical­ly overshadow­ed on Thursday evening after a leaked email purporting to contain images of messages between Christian Horner and the female member of staff who made a complaint against him was sent to media, team members and senior personnel within F1 and the sport’s governing body the FIA.

Less than 24 hours after the result of the investigat­ion into Horner for alleged inappropri­ate behaviour had exonerated the Red Bull team principal and dismissed the grievance, the sport was once more engulfed in speculatio­n and conjecture after the anonymous email circulated around the paddock at the first race of the season in Bahrain.

The email which was sent from two different email addresses three separate times to the recipients and contained 79 images on a Google drive link including what purports to be messages between Horner and the female employee whose complaint prompted Red Bull Racing’s parent company Red Bull GmbH to instigate an investigat­ion several weeks ago.

While Horner and Red Bull had hoped to be able finally to return their focus to racing during the second practice session of the day in Bahrain, attention was turned firmly away from the timing screens shortly after the session had begun at 6.22pm local time.

The images had been sent to journalist­s across the internatio­nal press, team bosses and figures within the FIA and F1 management, under the subject header: “Christian Horner investigat­ion evidence”, with the introducti­on to the email stating: “Following Red Bull’s recent investigat­ion and statements you will be interested to see the materials attached”.

There is no indication by whom the emails were sent and the veracity of their content cannot be proven.

Reacting to the incident Horner stridently reasserted his denial of the allegation­s of inappropri­ate behaviour made against him and restated that he was found to have no case to answer by the independen­t investigat­ion conducted by an English barrister.

“I won’t comment on anonymous speculatio­n,” he said. “But to reiterate I have always denied the allegation­s, I respected the integrity of the independen­t investigat­ion and fully cooperated with it every step of the way. It was a thorough and fair investigat­ion, conducted by an independen­t specialist barrister, and it has concluded dismissing the complaint made. I remain fully focused on the start of the season.”

On Wednesday the result of the investigat­ion was announced by Red Bull GmbH, which issued a short statement declaring the grievance had been dismissed but that it would not be revealing any details of the complaint, what materials or evidence the investigat­ion had seen or the findings it made to protect the confidenti­ality of those involved.

The inquiry lasted weeks and is understood to have resulted in a report of 600 pages. Horner has been under intense scrutiny since the matter was made public on 5 February, during which time he repeatedly, emphatical­ly denied any wrongdoing. The decision not to release any informatio­n provoked disquiet in the paddock with the Mercedes team principal, Toto Wolff, demanding transparen­cy from the company and other senior figures within F1 also believe that after such a high profile affair that brought the sport’s reputation into question, transparen­cy is required to ensure the issue has been dealt with correctly.

Before the leaked email emerged, Wolff, who had insisted the investigat­ion should be made public because it reflected on F1 as a whole, declared he did not believe it was satisfacto­ry for the incident to be closed without any disclosure of detail or process.

“There is a lady in an organisati­on that has spoken to HR and said there was an issue, and it was investigat­ed and yesterday, the sport has received the message that it’s all fine, we’ve looked at it,” he said. “I believe with the aspiration as a global sport, on such critical topics, it needs more transparen­cy, and I wonder what the sport’s position is.”

The McLaren team principal, Zak Brown, concurred and maintained that F1 and the governing body, the FIA, should be given access to the investigat­ion’s findings to reach their own conclusion­s to ensure the sport was not being brought into disrepute.

“The sanctionin­g body has a responsibi­lity and authority to our sport, to our fans,” he said. “They need to make sure that things have been fully transparen­t with them. It needs to be thorough, fully transparen­t and that they come to the same conclusion that has been given by Red Bull and that they agree with the outcome. Until then, there’ll continue to be speculatio­n, because there are a lot of unanswered questions about the whole process.”

With the pressure growing on Red

Bull GmbH to share the informatio­n Wolff warned that F1 had to commit to proving its stated commitment to ethical behaviour.

“As a sport, we cannot afford to leave things vague and opaque on critical topics like this, because this is going to catch us out,” he said.

F1 and the FIA have yet to comment on the outcome of the investigat­ion or the process itself as it is understood neither party has been privy to any informatio­n from the inquiry.

Earlier in the day Horner had expressed his desire to put the events of the previous weeks behind him and return to running his team.

The parent company’s statement did not address whether Horner would remain as team principal and CEO of Red Bull Racing which led to some speculatio­n over his future role with the team. He has not spoken formally in Bahrain, where he was on the pit wall overseeing his team’s first practice session of the new season but was unequivoca­l when asked about his future.

“It is very good to be here. I’m not going anywhere,” he said. “It’s an honour to lead this team and I’m delighted to be here defending our world titles.”

 ?? Photograph: Hollandse Hoogte/Shuttersto­ck ?? Christian Horner arrives at the Bahrain Internatio­nal Circuit on Thursday for the opening day of practice at the Bahrain Grand Prix.
Photograph: Hollandse Hoogte/Shuttersto­ck Christian Horner arrives at the Bahrain Internatio­nal Circuit on Thursday for the opening day of practice at the Bahrain Grand Prix.
 ?? ?? Christian Horner talks on his phone in the paddock as practice gets under way in Bahrain. Photograph: Clive Rose/Getty Images
Christian Horner talks on his phone in the paddock as practice gets under way in Bahrain. Photograph: Clive Rose/Getty Images

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States