http://motoring.asiaone.com/Motoring/News/Story/A1Story20110924-301212.html
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[TD="class: content_subtitle, align: left"]Saturday, Sep 24, 2011
The New Paper, AsiaOne [/TD]
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<TR>[TD="colspan: 3"]<!-- TITLE : start -->Bentley driver in road rage incident is RBS exec <!-- TITLE : end-->[/TD]
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By Amanda Yong
<!-- CONTENT : start -->She was filtering out of the Central Expressway (CTE) into Braddell Road when a car overtook her.
The blue Bentley accelerated and abruptly cut into her lane, she claimed. It then screeched to a sudden halt, forcing her to step on her brakes.
What happened next so frightened Madam Wang, 36, a manager, that it left her shaking.
The driver of the British sports car, a Caucasian man, got out of his vehicle, stormed over to her white Mercedes-Benz and started shouting at her.
Then, he slammed his bare fist into her car windscreen as she remained in the driver's seat. He did this at least twice, cracking the glass, Madam Wang said.
She immediately got out of the car as she did not want to be hit by falling glass shards.
She said: "I was terrified. I feared for my personal safety, I feared for my life."
Stunned by the man's outburst, Madam Wang's female cousin and four-year-old son also stepped out of the car.
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Click on thumbnails below to view more photos. Story continues after photos.
(Photos: Shin Min, Facebook)
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<!-- End For Web Only -->"I was shocked by his behaviour and shocked that he could actually damage the windscreen using his bare hand. And I was afraid that he would hit me too," said Madam Wang, a Taiwanese married to a Singaporean.
The incident happened just after 7pm on Tuesday night while Madam Wang and her family were on their way to dinner.
The New Paper understands that the man claimed that Madam Wang had cut into his lane and he decided to do the same to her. But she denied having cut into his lane.
And she remains baffled by the reason for the man's outburst.
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Speaking to TNP over the phone last night, Madam Wang said she was travelling on the CTE and the Bentley was behind her car while she was filtering out to Braddell Road.
"I checked for traffic on my right to see if I could turn left into Braddell Road and when I did, I saw the car overtake mine," she revealed.
The driver of the car sounded his horn at her as he sped ahead, travelling at more than 80kmh, she said.
"Then he suddenly cut into my lane and slammed on his brakes."
Madam Wang estimated that the distance between the two cars when both came to a stop was only about 3m.
"Fortunately, I was travelling at between 40kmh and 50kmh only, or I would have rammed into his car," she said.
Shell-shocked by the sudden turn of events, she was unprepared for what happened next.
She added: "The man got out of his car, came over to me and started scolding me in English. I didn't understand what he was saying, but I was very scared."
She said her Chinese Filipino cousin, who speaks English, tried communicating with the man. But she was too stunned by his actions to understand what he was shouting about.
Then, as Madam Wang remained seated in her car, the man punched the windscreen, making her cower in fear.
After she got out of her car, Madam Wang decided to call the police.
She said: "When he found out I had called the police, he said his three-year-old daughter, who was in his car, had bumped her head and was crying and he had to take her to the hospital.
"But when he carried his daughter out of the car, she seemed fine."
Madam Wang said the man's daughter was seated in the back, while his son was in the front passenger seat.
Offered to pay
She said that before the man left, he took out his business card, shoved it into her cousin's hands and said: "I'll pay for everything."
Then, he drove off. The police arrived shortly after.
Madam Wang said the man's card stated that he is a managing director in a unit of a major foreign bank here.
She said: "Did he think I wasn't a human being and that just because he's rich and drives an expensive car that he can just bully me and pay me off?
"He was very arrogant. His attitude was too much."
Madam Wang said what she found even more appalling was that he unleashed his rage against a group of defenceless women and a child.
"Some of my relatives were visiting from overseas... Three of my aunties in their 50s to 60s were in another car somewhere behind mine.
"My elderly aunties stopped their car behind mine during the incident so they saw what happened and my son was so scared his face turned white," she said.
Madam Wang said the incident left her so traumatised she could not sleep that night.
She explained: "When I got home about two hours after it happened, I wondered how I even had the courage to get out of the car after he smashed my windscreen.
"The incident has left me very feeling very uncomfortable. I'm so scared that I'm trembling now while talking to you."
Madam Wang's husband, a businessman who wanted to be known only as Mr Chen, 50, said the man sent him an e-mail at around 10.40 that night.
In the e-mail, the man claimed that he had also filed a police report and that he had taken his daughter to see a doctor for her injuries.
He also offered to pay for the damage to the windscreen.
But Mr Chen and his wife think that is not enough.
"There was not the slightest remorse or even the sign of an apology," he said.
"To us, it's not about money, it's about justice. What he did was totally uncalled for."
The man did not answer calls TNP made to his mobile phone last night.
The police were alerted about the incident at around 7.10pm, said a spokesman when contacted.
Investigations are ongoing.
Man is RBS exec
The Causasian man allegedly involved in the winscreen smashing incident is a high-ranking executive with the Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS).
The Straits Times reported that a RBS spokesman confirmed yesterday that Mr Stefan Masuhr, the bank's head of credit structuring and repackaging for the Asia-Pacific, had been involved in the incident which took place on the Central Expressway on Tuesday.
However, the spokesman declined to give more details as it was a 'private matter'.
It is not known what caused Mr Masuhr to be enraged but it is thought that Madam Wang had allegedly cut into his lane minutes before, causing him to brake abruptly.
Sources told The Straits Times that Mr Masuhr's daughter, who was in the back seat when the incident happened, had hit her head on the seat in front of her and suffered head injuries. She was taken to hospital to receive outpatient treatment.
His seven-year-old son was also in the car. Mr Masuhr, who is believed to be in his 40s, is said to be on sick leave since Thursday.
Mr Masuhr's co-workers described the bank executive as 'a reasonable and nice guy' to work with. Local media reports say that he was born in Germany and has been living here for 12 years. He became a Singaporean about four years ago.
Mr Mashur was with Deutsche Bank for four years and has worked in other offshore banks such as Asia HypoVereinsbank and WestLB, before joining RBS.
When contacted by The Straits Times at his Upper Thomson residence on Friday, he said he did not want to comment on the matter and directed all queries to an RBS spokesman.
No arrest has been made and police say that investigations are going on.
This article was first published in The New Paper.
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[TD="class: bodytext"]The cracked windscreen of the Mercedes-Benz driven by Madam Wang.
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