Apparently, cloning started quite a bit before Dolly.

Court to rule on mystery of ‘cloned’ Ferrari

When Egon Hofer, an Austrian racing driver and classic-car collector, bought a sleek, shiny red 1960s Ferrari once driven by Graham Hill, he thought that he had a unique racing car, worth almost £700,000 today.

He was dismayed to discover that there was another 330 P with the same chassis number in the Maranello Rosso museum at Ferrari’s headquarters near Modena, northern Italy. This week a five-year legal battle came to a head when a court in Modena appointed an independent expert to answer a question that has gripped the world of racing enthusiasts: which Ferrari is the clone?

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  1. Mwalimu Daudi says:

    I wonder if this and the post that you did some time ago about “kitlers” (cats who look like Hitler) are related.

    Some mad scientists/engineers somewhere are churning out kitlers and cloned Ferraris. Of course, the Bush administration is doing nothing about either problem.

    [LOL!–ed].

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