Jack Roush said on Friday that a Toyota team stole a sway bar made specifically for Roush Fenway Racing from one of his Sprint Cup teams last season at Dover. “A theft did occur,” the co-owner of Roush Fenway said during practice at Martinsville Speedway. “The part was recovered … We are still considering what if any legal action to seek.” One of Roush’s options is asking for a restraining order to guarantee the team in question does not duplicate the bar, which has been determined legal by NASCAR, for a competitive advantage. “It’s lawyer time,” Roush said. Roush made his first comments since he was quoted in ESPN The Magazine as saying a proprietary part was found missing from his inventory and discovered with a Toyota team. He discounted comments made by Jim Aust, the president of Toyota Racing Development, that a valve spring was found during a teardown inspection, identified as belonging to Roush and returned. Roush said the theft occurred in the garage area at Dover in September [2007], where the only Toyota teams in the field belonged to Michael Waltrip Racing and Team Red Bull. Lee White, the general manager of TRD, said his organization launched a full investigation into the allegation when Roush’s allegations were published in ESPN The Magazine. He said a valve spring that did not belong to Toyota ended up at TRD’s California location after the California race, that it was reported to NASCAR and returned. Roush said he became aware of the theft in early January when the vendor that produced the product for Roush Fenway was contacted by the Toyota team in question about duplicating the bar. Roush said he’s had several discussions with NASCAR officials about the situation. He was alarmed when Robin Pemberton, the vice president of competition for the series, said disappearing parts are a common occurrence and the teams needed to work it out amongst themselves. Roush said there is something fundamentally wrong if NASCAR doesn’t intercede, reminding the governing body has no problem reacting when somebody uses an illegal part — on purpose or not. Roush, noting he has been in the business 22 years, and said this is the first time he’s heard of such a situation. He declined to respond to a question in which Michael Waltrip Racing was insinuated as the Toyota team. “I don’t substantiate,” he said. Waltrip declined to comment until he heard how the question was posed and the way Roush responded.(see full story at ESPN.com), see past news about this on the #17 Team News and Links page.(3-28-2008)
