SpeedVegas, the car-racing experience that puts customers behind the wheel of Ferraris and Lamborghinis at speeds of up to 160 mph, has reopened.
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The second man killed in a fiery crash at SpeedVegas last week was identified Saturday by the Clark County Coroner.
While the Clark County coroner’s office has not identified the customer killed in Sunday’s SpeedVegas crash, indications are that he was Canadian real estate agent Craig Sherwood.
An executive with the SpeedVegas race track south of Las Vegas says the attraction, the scene of a fiery Lamborghini Aventador crash Sunday afternoon, will reopen next week.
Gil Ben-Kely’s personality was too big to be contained inside the wooden casket in which his body was buried on Wednesday, his son said.
A recently acquired Lamborghini Aventador was the vehicle involved in the Sunday crash that killed two people at SpeedVegas, raising new questions about whether the vehicle capable of reaching speeds of 200 mph was ready for the track.
The SpeedVegas instructor who died in a crash Sunday was Gil Ben-Kely, a two-time breast cancer survivor and immigrant to the United States.
On most days, the race track at SpeedVegas, the tourist attraction south of Las Vegas that has drawn thousands of customers to drive high-powered exotic cars, is humming with pricey vehicles that can hit 200 mph. But on Monday, the track was silent.
Two men died after a car crash and fire Sunday at the SpeedVegas racetrack, 14200 Las Vegas Blvd. South.