Car lovers from around the world splashed out more than $27 million ($43m) at an auction yesterday for dozens of luxury cars seized from the son of Equatorial Guinea's president in a Swiss money-laundering probe.
The 25 lots sold by auction house Bonhams included a white-and-cream 2014 Lamborghini Veneno roadster that cost the buyer 8.28 million Swiss francs ($13.3m), comprising a 15 per cent premium for the auction house but with potential taxes still to be added.
The supercar — one of only nine such versions produced — had been driven only 325 kilometres and has an official top speed of 359 kilometres per hour, Bonhams said.
Total proceeds from the sale beat the 18.5 million francs ($30 million) that authorities had hoped to fetch for a charity to benefit the people of oil-rich Equatorial Guinea.
The auction comes after the Geneva prosecutor's office announced in February it had closed a case against Teodoro Nguema Obiang Mangue, the son of the country's four-decade president, Teodoro Obiang, and two others following a probe of money laundering and mismanagement of public assets.