IT WAS A FANTASTICAL yarn and the judge wasn't buying it. Ian Burgess's trial in August 1981 wasn't going as well as he might have hoped, but then you could argue that he was his own worst enemy. The London-born businessman had been collared attempting to smuggle heroin into the UK and claimed insisted that the smack was merely a cash substitute. MIS preferred to pay for services rendered by means of 'nasal party favours'; smack was the currency of espionage, apparently. The 51-year-old had been helping Queen and country in the Middle East and he had been rewarded with Class A pharmaceuticals worth an estimated £1m.
The intelligence service didn't corroborate his story. Nor, it must be said, did it deny it. Burgess was sent down for ten years. This would probably have been another court case consigned to obscurity had he not once been a Formula 1 driver. Born in July 1930 as David William Allan, he was adopted as a baby by a Scottish couple and raised in Surrey. Burgess aspired to become an engineer, only then to be enraptured by motor racing. He first ventured trackside as the 1950s dawned, and was immediately a frontrunner in the half-litre Formula 3 category in a Cooper MkV.
Bu hikaye Octane dergisinin September 2024 sayısından alınmıştır.
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Bu hikaye Octane dergisinin September 2024 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
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Will China Change Everything? - China is tearing up modern motor manufacture but is yet to make more than a ripple in the classic car world. That could be about to change dramatically
China now dominates the automotive world in a way even Detroit in its heyday would have struggled to comprehend.Helped by Government incentives, the new car world is dominated by China's industries: whether full cars that undercut Western models by huge amounts, ownership of storied European brands such as Lotus and Volvo, or ownership and access to the vast majority of raw materials that go into EV cars, its influence is far-reaching and deep. However, this automotive enlightenment hasn't manifested itself in the classic world in any meaningful way - until now.
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