A Man Drove a Car Down Rome’s Spanish Steps. It Did Not Go Great. - The New York Times


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Key Incident: Car on the Spanish Steps

An 80-year-old Italian man drove his Mercedes A-Class down Rome's Spanish Steps, a vehicular area prohibited for vehicles. The car became stuck partway down. No injuries or significant damage to the monument were reported.

Driver's Status and Investigation

The driver tested negative for alcohol. Police released a photo of him and reported him to judicial authorities. Reports suggest he was in a state of confusion.

Witness Account

A hotel night-shift worker witnessed the event, initially mistaking it for a film shoot before realizing the seriousness of the situation. He captured video of the incident.

Legal Ramifications

Damaging historical monuments in Rome carries penalties of up to one year in prison and over €2,000 in fines. This incident follows previous cases of vehicles and scooters being driven down the steps.

Previous Incidents

The Spanish Steps have seen similar incidents in the past, including an electric scooter incident in 2022 that caused significant damage, and another instance of a Maserati being driven down the steps.

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What’s the quickest way down Rome’s Spanish Steps?

Definitely not by car.

Before dawn on Tuesday, an 80-year-old Italian man behind the wheel of a Mercedes A-Class tried to navigate the sedan down the iconic steps, which are closed to vehicles, according to Rome’s police department. The car made it part of the way down but got stuck, the authorities said.

Nobody was injured and the police did not announce any damage to the monument.

“After conducting all necessary checks, the driver was reported to the judicial authorities,” the police said in an email on Tuesday.

The driver tested negative for alcohol, the police added. The police did not identify the driver but released a photo of him, standing by the vehicle and dressed in a suit, talking to a police officer. According to the Italian newspaper Il Corriere della Sera, the man was in a state of confusion.

A video of the episode circulating online shows the car slowly making its way down the steps. The fire department later removed the car from the steps with a crane.

Sowad Mujibullah was working a night shift at a nearby hotel just before 4 a.m. when he heard a loud sound and saw the car come down the steps. He initially thought that it was part of a movie shoot, but “then I realized, no, it was not like that, because nobody was there.”

He captured video of the incident, which he called shocking. The steps are one of the most historic places in Italy, he said in a phone interview, adding: “It should not be destroyed by these crazy things.”

Destroying or damaging a monument or property that has significant value in Rome is punishable by up to a year in prison and a fine of more than 2,000 euros ($2,300).

Prohibitions against vehicles on the Spanish Steps, Scalinata di Trinità dei Monti in Italian, have not prevented other incidents.

In 2022, American tourists pushed an electric scooter down the steps, causing 25,000 euros in damage. The same year, a man drove a Maserati sports car down the steps after taking a wrong turn.

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