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Toyota’s Le Mans dream dashed in final minutes

Porsche snatched their 18th Le Mans 24 Hour Race victory in the most dramatic of circumstances after Toyota suffered engine failure with just three minutes left on Sunday.

Toyota's Le Mans dream dashed in final minutes
Switzerland's Neel Jani drives his Porsche 919 Hybrid N°2 during the 84th Le Mans 24-hours endurance race. Photo: Jean-Sebastien Evrard/AFP
Neel Jani took the Porsche 919 Hybrid over the line, to elation and tears of joy in their garage, after Kazuki Nakajima's Toyota TS050 stuttered to a halt when looking nailed-on to win the endurance race for the Japanese team for the first time in three decades of trying.
   
Jani, Romain Dumas and Marc Lieb, drivers of the Porsche number two car, celebrated wildly in front of 263,500 fans in the 84th edition of the gruelling showpiece, which began on Saturday under driving rain and behind a safety car.
   
In contrast, Toyota saw their Le Mans jinx strike at the worst possible time.
 
The Toyota garage looked on aghast as Nakajima's car suddenly began slowing with only five minutes of the 24 hours to go.
   
He had been as much as 90 seconds ahead at one point, but suddenly it all went wrong and he began to lose power, allowing Jani to close fast.
   
Nakajima came to an agonising stop on the straight as Jani sped past to victory.
   
Toyota's number six car with Stephane Sarrazin at the wheel crossed the line in second with an Audi third.

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TAXES

German prosecutors raid Porsche in corruption probe

Prosecutors in Stuttgart said they raided German sports car maker and Volkswagen subsidiary Porsche on Tuesday on suspicion that an auditor was bribed to pass information to the company's tax advisor.

German prosecutors raid Porsche in corruption probe
Porsche cars for sale in Bremen. Photo: DPA

The investigators suspect that “an official from the Stuttgart business audit office revealed confidential information to a tax advisor of Porsche AG and accepted benefits in exchange,” they said in a statement.

Almost 200 police and prosecutors searched the luxury car maker's offices, tax collectors' offices, a tax advisor's office and private homes in and around Stuttgart for paper and digital documents.

On top of the bribery probe, investigators suspect the company made “unjustified” and “disproportionately large” payments to a former works council member.

Six people, including some from the company leadership, “may have committed fraud against Porsche AG” they said.

Porsche confirmed to AFP that the searches had taken place, adding that the carmaker “is cooperating fully with the authorities.”

On top of the bribery probe, investigators suspect the company made
“unjustified” and “disproportionately large” payments to a former works
council member.

They “may have committed fraud against Porsche AG,” said prosecutors.

The former works council member was not one of the people under suspicion, prosecutors said.

Earlier this month, Porsche agreed to pay a fine of 535 million over its role in the separate “dieselgate” emissions cheating scandal.

Its parent company Volkswagen admitted in 2015 to manipulating 11 million vehicles worldwide to appear less polluting in the lab than on the road.

SEE ALSO: Luxury carmaker Porsche fined 535 million over diesel cheating scandal

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