Lodi News-Sentinel

NASCAR details its investigat­ion of Wallace’s garage stall

- By Alex Andrejev

NASCAR president Steve Phelps spoke with the media Thursday after the sanctionin­g body completed its investigat­ion into the door pull shaped like a noose found Sunday at Talladega Superspeed­way in the garage stall assigned to Bubba Wallace.

NASCAR released a photo of the noose shortly before Phelps spoke.

“As you can see from the photo, the noose was real,” Phelps said. “As was our concern for Bubba.”

While Phelps previously said he would not change anything about how NASCAR handled the investigat­ion, he added Thursday that, “In hindsight, we should have — I should have — used the word ‘alleged’ in our statement.”

“Upon learning of and seeing the noose, our initial reaction was to protect our driver,” Phelps said. “We’re living in a highly charged and emotional time. What we saw was a symbol of hate, and was only present in one area of the garage, that of the 43 car of Bubba Wallace.”

NASCAR said it had officials sweep all of its garages across the country as part of the investigat­ion, and found that only 11 of 1,684 stalls had pull-down ropes tied in a knot, and only one stall — Wallace’s — had the rope fashioned like a noose.

Phelps also revealed further details of the investigat­ion, including a timeline of when events occurred and what the sport will change going forward.

Phelps said that after the morning car inspection and prior to the race’s 3 p.m. scheduled start time Sunday, a member of Wallace’s team noticed the noose shape. Phelps said the sanctionin­g body received the report approximat­ely an hour and a half later, and NASCAR security did a sweep of all 40 garage stalls to see if any other pull ropes were tied similarly, finding only the one in Wallace’s garage tied like a noose.

That evening, NASCAR released the following statement:

“Late this afternoon, NASCAR was made aware that a noose was found in the garage stall of the 43 team. We are angry and outraged, and cannot state strongly enough how seriously we take this heinous act. We have launched an immediate investigat­ion, and will do everything we can to identify the person(s) responsibl­e and eliminate them from the sport. As we have stated unequivoca­lly, there is no place for racism in NASCAR, and this act only strengthen­s our resolve to make the sport open and welcoming to all.”

“We thought it was important to put out a statement as quickly as we could,” Phelps said. He later added that, “Some feel that the phrasing or words used were not right.”

“That comes with the territory,” he continued. “And I will take full responsibi­lity for that and for the emotion that was attached to it. Based on the evidence we had, we felt that one of our drivers had been threatened — a driver who had been extremely courageous in recent words and actions.”

Phelps was referring to the sport embracing the fight against racial injustice amid nationwide protests and its recent ban of the Confederat­e flag at NASCAR events, a decision sparked by Wallace, the only Black driver in the Cup Series.

“Were there heightened emotions (with) what has gone on over the past two and a half weeks in our country and then in our sport? I think, absolutely, yeah, it was emotionall­y charged for a lot of people,” Phelps said.

Phelps said the Birmingham (Ala.) branch of the FBI reached out to NASCAR on Monday morning and arrived with 15 field agents to begin their investigat­ion at the track. Phelps said NASCAR provided the FBI with the list of personnel who had access to the garage, as well as video and images taken from that weekend and the 2019 fall race weekend. He also said Talladega Superspeed­way provided the FBI with a list of events that had taken place since October of 2019, which was when the new Cup garage opened.

On Tuesday, the FBI determined the incident was not a hate crime, as the knot shaped as a noose had been in that garage stall since October. Phelps said the Wood Brothers Racing team, the last team to use that stall, aided in the investigat­ion. The team released a statement Tuesday saying that one of its employees recalled seeing the knot last fall and alerted the team on Monday, and the team then alerted NASCAR.

 ?? NASCAR/TNS ?? The FBI investigat­ed a noose that was reported found in NASCAR driver Bubba Wallace's garage stall last weekend at Talladega Superspeed­way.
NASCAR/TNS The FBI investigat­ed a noose that was reported found in NASCAR driver Bubba Wallace's garage stall last weekend at Talladega Superspeed­way.

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