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The Fatal DeLorean Factory: The Scandal That Destroyed a Car Empire In the heart of Dunmurry, Belfast, there once stood a futuristic dream—a state-of-the-art factory built on a swamp with £80 million of British taxpayer money, designed to bring hope and jobs to a violently divided, working-class Northern Ireland. The DeLorean Motor Company wasn't merely a car manufacturer; it was a political gamble, a symbol of possibility where Catholic and Protestant workers crossed sectarian lines to build the iconic stainless-steel, gull-wing DMC-12, a car that looked like it had arrived from the future. For two glorious years, it worked—2,500 highly motivated workers produced world-class vehicles that became global pop-culture legends. But John DeLorean destroyed it all. Reckless corporate spending, lavish lifestyles funded by investor money, and then the final, unforgivable betrayal: the FBI cocaine trafficking bust that exposed DeLorean as a desperate conman willing to fund his empire through drug deals. The scandal was instant and catastrophic. Investors fled. Funding evaporated. In 1982, the factory locked its gates, leaving 2,500 workers—people who'd believed in the dream, who'd crossed religious divides to build something remarkable—jobless and betrayed. Today, the Dunmurry factory site stands as a haunting monument to corporate greed and political naivety, its brand-new assembly lines frozen in silence, a multi-million-pound investment abandoned after just two years. The DeLorean became immortal thanks to "Back to the Future," but that fame only sharpens the tragedy: a car that symbolized the future was built in a factory destroyed by one man's corruption. This is the story of how British taxpayers funded a dream, how Belfast workers built a legend, and how John DeLorean's scandal killed them both.