A car was buried in the backyard of a Northern California mansion 30 years ago as part of a scheme to commit insurance fraud, authorities said Thursday.
The convertible Mercedes was discovered last month by landscapers in the affluent town of Atherton in Silicon Valley.
Crews excavated the vehicle and police said no human remains were found after cadaver dogs and ground penetrating radar were used to examine the scene.
Investigators said they determined the Mercedes was buried for insurance fraud purposes, the San Francisco Chronicle reported.
The car was reported stolen in nearby Palo Alto in September 1992. Its owner, Johnny Bocktune Lew, had owned the home where the Mercedes was found. He was accused in 1999 of hiring people to sink a yacht worth $1.2 million to cash in on the insurance, according to the Chronicle.
Lew, who is dead, had also served jail time for murder and attempted murder in Los Angeles County decades ago.
Topics California Auto Fraud
Was this article valuable?
Here are more articles you may enjoy.

California Taking Action Against State Farm Over LA Wildfire Claims
Lawyers, Traders Among 30 Charged in Global Insider Trading Case
Root Inc. Opens 2026 With Best Quarterly Net Income Ever at Nearly $36M
Florida Governor Signs Bill Dropping Building Permits for Work Valued at $7,500 or Less 

