John DeLorean: Auto mogul's fall and acquittal

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Quick Facts
DeLorean's dream crushed: Bankruptcy and FBI in 1982
In the spring of 1982, a deep crisis threatened John Zachary DeLorean's life's work. His car company, DeLorean Motor Company (DMC), was in freefall, plagued by quality issues with the otherwise futuristic DMC-12 model and a strained car market. The visionary engineer, John DeLorean, who had once created iconic cars like the Pontiac GTO, faced inevitable bankruptcy.
However, the drama that unfolded in the following months was far more spectacular than any business downturn. It became a high-profile case that highlighted the limits of state power and went down in history as one of the most controversial FBI operations in modern times.
DMC-12 collapse: Nightmare and downfall for the company
The crisis for DeLorean Motor Company was real. Despite significant British government investment in the Northern Ireland factory to create jobs, the hyped DMC-12 failed to meet expectations. Its stainless steel panels and iconic gull-wing doors attracted attention, but beneath the surface, the car was plagued by technical weaknesses. Experts criticized its reliability, unexpected engine stalls, and an engine that lacked the necessary power for a sports car. Sales faltered, and by 1982, the company was effectively bankrupt.
FBI's informant: Hoffman's fatal June 1982 opportunity
It was in this desperate situation that the FBI entered the scene. They used an informant, James Timothy Hoffman, a former drug dealer cooperating with authorities to reduce his own sentence. Aware of DMC's financial chaos, Hoffman contacted John DeLorean in June 1982. He presented an apparently lucrative "business opportunity" that could save the company – a plan later scrutinised for elements of fraud on the informant's part. Through a series of meetings, often secretly recorded by FBI undercover agents, DeLorean became entangled in a complex arrangement involving theoretical investments and secret bank accounts.
Cocaine sting hits: 55 kg of drugs seized in LA
The arrangement culminated in a deal: John DeLorean was to allegedly finance the import of 220 kg of drugs (specifically cocaine) with a street value of $24 million. FBI undercover agents met him in Los Angeles to arrange the final stage of this drug transaction. On October 19, 1982, in a hotel room near Los Angeles International Airport, DeLorean was presented with a suitcase filled with over 55 kg of cocaine. Hidden camera footage captured the moment DeLorean examined the drugs and stated, "It's better than gold." His arrest followed immediately. DeLorean was charged with serious drug offenses and remanded in custody, only to be released on $5 million bail.
'Entrapment' plea: Hoffman's role, FBI's methods probed
The trial of John DeLorean began in April 1984 and lasted until August of that year. His defense attorneys, Howard Weitzman and Donald Re, employed a bold strategy. They argued not primarily that DeLorean was innocent of agreeing to the deal, but that he had been systematically manipulated and entrapped by the FBI – a legal defense known as entrapment. They highlighted that informant Hoffman was a career criminal with a strong motive to frame DeLorean to save himself, whereas DeLorean had no prior criminal record. Phone logs from DeLorean's secretary substantiated that Hoffman had made the initial contact on June 28, 1982, not the other way around. The defense also pointed to a suspicious 47-minute gap in the audio recordings of a critical meeting where DeLorean later claimed he had tried to back out of the deal. Weitzman went as far as to compare the state's actions in this high-profile case, which he perceived as a form of corruption of the justice system, to the authoritarian methods described in George Orwell's novel *1984*, suggesting methods reminiscent of Stasi-like surveillance and manipulation.
Surprise verdict: DeLorean acquitted of trafficking
After 29 hours of deliberation, on August 16, 1984, the jury found John DeLorean not guilty on all charges, resulting in a sensational acquittal. They acknowledged that he had been subjected to entrapment – meaning the FBI had induced the crime. During the trial, prosecutors had attempted to argue that DeLorean had not contributed real money, only a shell company, as proof that he feared being implicated in the deal by organized crime. However, the jury found this argument insufficient to refute the defense's strong claim of manipulation.
Aftermath: DMC's collapse and DeLorean's final years
Legally, the acquittal was a significant victory for the entrapment defense and a landmark case concerning potentially overzealous conduct by the FBI. However, for John DeLorean, it could not erase the damage this high-profile case had inflicted on his career and reputation. DeLorean Motor Company was permanently closed in 1983, another victim of the financial bankruptcy and scandal. Although the DMC-12 has since become a cult icon, not least thanks to its role in the popular *Back to the Future* films, John DeLorean never managed to rebuild his business empire. He spent his final years on various projects and endeavors to clear his name after the drug charges. He died in 2005, a man who avoided prison, but whose story remained a bizarre mix of soaring ambition, catastrophic failure, and a strange victory over the system that tried to crush him.
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Susanne Sperling
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