It follows Red Bull’s suspension of the female employee and the beginning of a second probe into leaks related to the incident.
According to Telegraph Sport, the lady whose complaint against Red Bull’s parent firm was rejected is anticipated to file an appeal in the next several days.
Although there was a pause while she changed attorneys, it is believed that she plans to challenge the findings of Red Bull GmbH’s internal probe into claims of dominating behavior.
On February 28, the eve of the Bahrain 2024 season opener, Red Bull declared that Horner’s complaint had been dropped after a weeks-long inquiry by an unidentified outside specialized attorney.
Since then, the firm has suspended Horner’s accuser, citing doubts about the veracity of her evidence as the cause.
However, that is not the end of the story. The woman in question not only plans to continue fighting, Red Bull GmbH is still under pressure to provide more details about how it made its choice.
A second inquiry into the frequent leaks that have happened over the past five weeks is also reportedly continuing. The nature of some of the claims was exposed after the investigation itself. Ultimately, a massive batch of screen grabs, primarily from WhatsApp chats that appeared to be between Horner and his accuser, were leaked to journalists by anonymous email the day after Horner was found not guilty.
Following his comments at the Saudi Arabian Grand Prix last week, which raised the possibility that he might be suspended or resign, there was conjecture that Marko’s exit may activate a clause in Max Verstappen’s contract that would let him to go.
It is acknowledged that there are questions concerning that clause’s legitimacy. As a director of the business, Marko reportedly added it on his own without consulting Red Bull Racing or Group, according to Telegraph Sport. When questioned about the veracity of this, Red Bull chose not to respond.