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Angela Harkness (also known as Fatemeh Karimkhani, born in 1976, in Tehran, Iran) is a convicted scam artist. Her biggest scheme was Angela's Motorsports , a NASCAR team in 2003. Harkness was sentenced to 40 months in prison on May 25, 2007.
Motor Sport is a monthly motor racing magazine, founded in the United Kingdom in 1924 [1] as the Brooklands Gazette. [2] The name was changed to Motor Sport for the August 1925 issue. [3] The magazine covers motor sport in general, although from 1997 to 2006 its emphasis was historic motorsport. It remains one of the leading titles on both ...
The cancellation scam drew $30 million out of victims. Widespread scheme intentionally targeted older, vulnerable people Forty-three people were charged in an October 2020 complaint, USA v.
Grassroots Motorsports (GRM) is an American print and digital periodical devoted to hardcore sports cars, driving skill improvement, technical advice, and amateur motorsports such as road racing, autocross and rallying. It was established in 1984 and is published eight times a year. [2]
Motorsport.com is Motorsport Network's flagship website operated across in 15 languages and 21 national editions. [citation needed]The platform reports across all forms of international and national motorsport including Formula 1, MotoGP, NASCAR & IndyCar on a rolling 24/7 basis, powered by a multi-edition CMS that aggregates & localizes and aggregating news, video, photos and results.
A British multinational design and engineering company behind world-famous buildings such as the Sydney Opera House has confirmed that it was the target of a deepfake scam that led to one of its ...
A review bomb is a malicious Internet phenomenon in which a large number of people or a few people with multiple accounts [1] post negative user reviews online in an attempt to harm the sales or popularity of a product, a service, or a business. [2]
Pit lane at Pocono Raceway In any racing series that permits scheduled pit stops, pit strategy becomes one of the most important features of the race; this is because a race car travelling at 100 miles per hour (160 kilometres per hour) will travel approximately 150 feet (45 metres) per second. During a ten-second pit stop, a car's competitors will gain approximately one-quarter-mile (450 ...