Adrian Sutil’s Koenigsegg One:1 has vanished from Monaco, and police now face a strange problem – how does anyone hide one of the rarest, loudest, most recognizable hypercars ever built? The former Formula 1 driver’s car, reportedly worth up to $22 million, disappeared earlier this year as part of a bigger case involving several high-end vehicles. Interpol and European authorities now want it found, while all of us gearheads want answers, photos, and maybe a very awkward explanation from whoever thought a clear-carbon Koenigsegg with pink accents would make a subtle getaway car. The World’s Loudest Hypercar Mystery The missing car is identified as chassis #7107. Hypercars at this level do not move like normal stolen cars – a thief can repaint a mass-market SUV, swap plates, and feed it into the parts world, but a One:1 sits in a tiny club where collectors, brokers, transporters, spotters, and brand insiders tend to know each car by chassis, color, and gossip history.Sutil’s example makes that even harder. Reports describe it with a clear carbon fiber body and China Pink accents, a spec that turns the car into a rolling fingerprint. It is not the kind of thing someone can park behind a supermarket and hope nobody notices. Even in Monaco, where a Bugatti barely raises an eyebrow, this car would still cause neck injuries. It’s Actually A Dirty Story Via: Koenigsegg German outlet Auto Motor und Sport reported that nine luxury cars disappeared from Sutil’s Monaco garage after alleged threats against his family. The list reportedly included not just the One:1, but also a Koenigsegg Regera, a Rolls-Royce Phantom, several Ferraris and Porsches, and a Mercedes-Benz 600 once owned by Elvis Presley. Sutil’s lawyer, Dirk Schmitz, alleged that a caller claimed ties to the Wagner Group and demanded access to the vehicles. Authorities in Stuttgart, Baden-Württemberg, Monaco, and Interpol now have roles in the case.The legal backdrop adds another twist – Sutil was arrested in Germany in late November 2025 on suspicion of fraud and embezzlement tied to luxury vehicles. His lawyer has denied the allegations on his behalf and argued that Sutil himself became the victim of extortion. German authorities had already seized around 20 vehicles connected to him across multiple countries, which makes the missing Monaco cars part of a much messier story than a simple garage break-in. This Is One Very Special Koenigsegg Via: KoenigseggThe One:1 is not just an expensive Agera with a big wing. Koenigsegg built only seven examples between 2014 and 2015, and the company called it the first production “megacar” because it made one megawatt of power. Its name comes from its 1:1 power-to-weight ratio – 1,360 horsepower and a 1,360-kg curb weight.Koenigsegg also stuffed it with crazy hardware. The One:1 uses a 5.0-liter twin-turbo V8, active aerodynamics, upgraded suspension, carbon fiber wheels, a roof air scoop, and a rev limit of 8,250 rpm. It aimed at track speed as much as top-speed bragging rights, yet Koenigsegg still built it as a road-legal machine.A super rare beast indeed, selling the missing car would be a nightmare. A buyer rich enough to afford it would likely know enough to avoid it. A private collection could hide it, but servicing, transporting, registering, or even displaying it would invite questions. Koenigsegg knows its cars, and the collector world knows its cars. The internet definitely knows its cars, too.