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Red Bull Racing dismisses grievance against Christian Horner, suspends his accuser
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Date:2025-04-13 02:54:05
In early February, Formula One team Red Bull Racing received a complaint from a female employee of inappropriate behavior from team principal Christian Horner.
On Thursday, the team suspended the woman who accused him.
Red Bull launched an internal investigation early last month after receiving the complaint but did not comment on the nature of the accusations. Horner denied all claims and called the investigation "a distraction" at Red Bull's car launch on Feb. 15.
Mercedes team principal Toto Wolff called for transparency with the investigation at preseason testing in Bahrain two weeks ago.
"If it is done in the right way with transparency and rigor, we need to look at the outcomes and what it means for F1 and how we can learn from that," said Wolff.
However, Red Bull have not provided any details about the investigation, including the name of the lawyer who conducted it.
On Feb. 28, the team dismissed the complaint and allowed the 50 year old to return to his role as team principal, which he's held since 2005. The accuser has the right to appeal the decision, according to the team.
One day later, several Formula One reporters received an anonymous email containing a series of leaked messages sent from Horner. The team principal would not comment on the validity of the messages at the Bahrain Grand Prix last weekend.
On Thursday, one week after the leaked messages, the woman was suspended. According to reporting from The Guardian, the woman's suspension was "a direct result of Red Bull’s inquiry."
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Jos Verstappen speaks out
At the Bahrain Grand Prix last weekend, Jos Verstappen, father of Red Bull's three-time World Drivers' Champion Max Verstappen, spoke out against Horner. He said the situation with the team principal was hurting the team and that his presence was causing a division within that could lead it to "explode."
Asked about his father's comments, Max told reporters, "He's not a liar, that's for sure."
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James Vowles, Toto Wolff share how Horner investigation reflects the sport
James Vowles, who took over team principal duties at Williams last year, shared how he believes the Horner investigation reflects the environment and culture of the sport in a February interview with Bloomberg.
"We all have to look at each other in the mirror and make sure that we are posing the right questions internally and acting in a way that we can only be proud of, not today but in the next 10 years," Vowles said.
"The sport itself… wind back 20 years ago, male-dominated without question – if you had to ask me what makes up a team, it would be white, more than likely, male, more than likely, 40 years old… something in that ballpark. That’s changing, and it’s only a positive that’s changing that result.
"The best ideas don’t come from being a closed group of individuals. It comes from diversity.
"These allegations are allegations. I’m afraid I don’t have any understanding of what is behind them and the significance of what has happened. All I can say is that should this ever happen in our regard, we’ll be entirely supportive in terms of fixing it and making sure we have a culture that is accepting of everyone."
Vowles' comments are similar to those Wolff made at preseason testing two weeks ago.
"F1 and the teams, we stand for inclusion, equality, fairness, diversity. And it is not only talking about it, it is living it day in and day out," Wolff said at the time. "It is not just a team issue. It is an issue for all of F1."
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Lewis Hamilton speaks out on the investigation
Mercedes driver Lewis Hamilton made a statement on how Red Bull's process in the Horner investigation undermines the sport's efforts to promote diversity.
Christian Horner wife
Since 2015, Horner has been married to Geri Halliwell, also known as "Ginger Spice" of the Spice Girls pop group.
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