DP World Removes Chairman Following Epstein Connection Revelations Amid McLaren Partnership
DP World, a major sponsor of the McLaren Formula 1 team, has made a leadership change at the executive level. The decision follows the surfacing of information regarding chairman Sultan Ahmed bin Sulayem's associations with convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

In a significant corporate development affecting one of Formula 1's prominent sponsorship deals, logistics giant DP World has terminated the tenure of chairman Sultan Ahmed bin Sulayem. The removal comes in the wake of newly disclosed details illuminating his connections to Jeffrey Epstein, who was convicted of sexual crimes.
DP World maintains a substantial partnership with the McLaren racing team in the paddock, making the leadership transition noteworthy for the Woking-based outfit and the broader F1 community. The company's decision to replace its top executive underscores the reputational implications of the revelations that have come to light concerning Sulayem's relationship with the disgraced financier.
The specifics surrounding the nature of these connections emerged through documented communications, adding weight to the company's swift action in restructuring its leadership hierarchy. As McLaren continues its competitive efforts in the championship, the sponsorship arrangement with DP World remains a key commercial element of the team's operations.
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Full Regulation Text
Article 1.3.7
Sanctions, Criminal Conviction, and Reputation Requirements
Chapter: SECTION C: TECHNICAL REGULATIONS
In Simple Terms
F1 teams and their leaders must follow the law and maintain a good reputation. They cannot be on international sanction lists, have serious criminal convictions, or commit fraud and money laundering. Breaking this rule protects the sport's integrity and credibility.
- New teams and senior executives cannot be on EU or US sanction lists
- Criminal convictions for serious crimes like fraud, money laundering, terrorism, or racketeering are prohibited
- Team leadership must not damage the reputation of Power Unit manufacturers
- These requirements ensure F1 maintains ethical standards and legal compliance
Official FIA Text
New Customer Competitor and senior executives must not be listed in EU/US sanction lists, convicted of indictable criminal offence, fraud, money laundering, racketeering, terrorism, bankruptcy, or committed actions harming PU Manufacturer reputation.
Article 1.3.11
Non-Disparagement Clause
Chapter: SECTION C: TECHNICAL REGULATIONS
In Simple Terms
Teams, engine manufacturers, and customer competitors must avoid making false, misleading, or insulting comments about each other that could damage their reputation or image. Basically, no trash talk that crosses the line from competition into dishonesty or defamation.
- Covers teams, engine manufacturers, and customer competitors
- Prohibits deceptive, misleading, disparaging, or negative comments
- Protects reputation, goodwill, and public image of all parties
- Applies to comments that injure or bring disrepute to others
Official FIA Text
New Customer Competitor and PU Manufacturer shall not make deceptive, misleading, disparaging or negative comments which injures, damages or brings disrepute to other party's reputation, goodwill or image.
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