MEXICO CITY (Reuters) - A report that Mexico's attorney general owns a Ferrari registered at an unoccupied house has added a twist to a growing political battle over who will lead a new institution designed to battle corruption.
The report by a Mexican anti-graft group published on Monday said Mexican Attorney General Raul Cervantes had a $218,000 (£168,623) Ferrari registered at an apparently unoccupied house, worth $25,000, in the state of Morelos that also had two other Ferraris and an Audi registered to the same address.