Evening Standard

ECCLESTONE’S MOTHER-IN-LAW ‘KIDNAPPED IN £28 MILLION PLOT’

- Justin Davenport and Donna Bowater

THE mother-in-law of Formula One mogul Bernie Ecclestone has been kidnapped in Brazil and criminals are demanding £28 million for her return, according to reports.

Aparecida Schunck, the mother of Ecclestone’s third wife, Fabiana Flosi, was reportedly seized on Friday night near her home in Sao Paulo. Her kidnappers are demanding the ransom — thought to be the biggest in Brazilian history — be paid in pounds sterling.

The kidnapping is another blow to Brazil ahead of the 2016 Rio Olympics, which are beset with fears over the Zika virus, law and order and terrorism.

The Games are due to open in less than two weeks time with the country experienci­ng its worst economic crisis for decades.

Ecclestone, 85, one of the most powerful men in sport, married Fabiana, 38, in 2012, three years after meeting her at the Brazilian Grand Prix, where she was vice-president of marketing.

The Brazilian press has reported that Ms Schunck, 67, was snatched on Friday night near her home in the Interlagos district of Brazil’s biggest city.

The criminals are reportedly demanding a ransom of £28 million for her release and have stipulated that the money be split into four plastic bags, a source close to the police investigat­ion told Brazilian magazine Veja.

It is claimed that the criminals have already been in touch with the Ecclestone family. Fabiana is said to be close to her mother and the pair have been pictured together on trips to London and at Formula One race days.

In a Facebook post on Mother’s Day Fabiana wrote: “Happy Mother’s Day to all mothers, and especially mine. There are no words to thank so much love and dedication. Thank you Mum, I love you.”

There has been no confirmati­on of the kidnap from authoritie­s in Brazil or word from the Ecclestone family.

A source close to the family said Ecclestone’s daughter Petra, 27, was currently in Los Angeles and was quite pos si b ly unaware o f th e ne ws. A spokesman for her sister Tamara, 32, said she did not want to comment.

Ecclestone, who was born in Suffolk, the son of a trawlerman, has been the hands-on supremo in Formula One for four decades. He left school at 16 and gained a love of speed as a promising car and motorcycle racer. However, a crash at Brands Hatch in 1951 ended his competitiv­e career. He remained on the fringes of the motor racing sport until the Sixties when he became the manager of Jochen Rindt, who won the Formula One drivers’ championsh­ip posthumous­ly in 1970, having crashed at the Italian circuit of Monza.

In 1971, he bought the Brabham racing team and became a key figure as he and other team leaders tried to gain control of TV rights. In 1978, he became chief executive of the Formula One Constructo­rs’ Associatio­n and gradually assumed power over the sport.

He was hugely successful promoting Formula One not just as a sport but as a brand, making it enormously valuable to sponsors and advertiser­s, and spreading the Grand Prix circuit to new parts of the world.

By the late Nineties, Ecclestone possessed Britain’s largest self-made fortune and he is now the fourth-richest person in the UK, with an estimated £3.2 billion fortune. He divorced his wife of 25 years, Croatian model Slavica Radic, with whom he had Tamara and Petra, to marry Ms Flosi, a Brazilian.

Kidnapping was common in Brazil a decade ago, with several people seized each day and often ransomed for only a few hundred dollars. A crackdown by police dramatical­ly cut the number of abduc tions and the cr i me ha s become rare today.

 ??  ?? Third wife: Formula One boss Bernie Ecclestone with Fabiana Flosi. Her mother was taken on Friday
Third wife: Formula One boss Bernie Ecclestone with Fabiana Flosi. Her mother was taken on Friday
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