chrisc90 wrote: ↑10 Oct 2022, 22:09
ringo wrote: ↑10 Oct 2022, 21:58
I feel they will keep the punishments in 2021 and apply a very light slap for 2022.
By grey areas do you mean the fiscal ones or technical related to work on the car?
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Fiscal grey areas I presume that Horner was referencing in his interviews. There is reports of him mentioning there being clarifications issued after the reporting deadline. So there is clearly a LOT of area that is grey in the rules.
Likely it will be investigated where budget was spent. Teams will go this is what we spent in the areas that was clearly defined, and this is what was spent in the grey area section, or areas that were clarified after the submission of the reports.
Its going to come down to grey areas and what areas that money was spent on that could well of been interpreted as outside the budget. At present, there's no guarantees that any 'extra' money was spent on the car or staffing use to develop the car.
I think the time for investigation was over. Once an audit has been done I am sure prior to issuing certificates those who were sampled and interviewed were questioned rigorously for clarification. This would be the post reporting deadline you speak of. That time has passed. Thereafter the auditor makes recommendations for potential infractions that can be corrected. The major ones now that cannot be corrected remain and then the official certificate is issued.
Also why Redbull may not have forgiveness to clarify is that during 2021, the teams were free to consult each and every time with the FIA that they wanted to spend on a budget item. They really have no excuse for over spending. Everything was made clear to them, and if it was not, the FIA had an open door policy to have someone meet with the team and sit down with them and guide which spend was okay and which was not okay.
So what I gather, is that the team intentionally hid some spends from the FIA and did not bother to consult during the 2021 year. The mistake they made is that the FIA had some really good auditors, possibly much more competent than the accountants and internal auditors redbull have on payroll to help them shift spends.
So to conclude, there really was no grey area. If a grey area was suspected the team had the freedom to call the FIA and make that grey area white or black. They chose not to because they felt the could walk around the regs.
What redbull may do now.. is the appeal the FIA auditors themselves and not the findings, or even try to negotiate the punishment.