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#SteveBovan #FunnyCarHistory #DragRacingHistory #NHRA #BlairsSpeedShop #BrotherhoodOfEternalLove #HareKrishnaScandal #WitnessProtection #1970sCrime #OrangeCountyCrime #MobHit #TrueCrimeMotorsports #AFXFunnyCar #NitroRacing #MotorsportsDocumentary Watch Next : • The Invisible Injury That Slowly Ended Joe... • The Real Reason RL Peyton Was Arrested at ... • The Most Dangerous Decade of Drag Racing • The Death Of Barbara Roufs And The Dark Co... • This is Why The NHRA Banned Connie Kalitta... • Why Top Fuel Drivers Refused to Race Wild ... Steve Bovan was once a respected West Coast Funny Car pioneer, building blown Chevy A/FX machines out of Blair's Speed Shop during the explosive growth of 1960s drag racing. He match raced across America, ran nine-second passes at 160 mph, and competed during the early evolution of NHRA Funny Cars. From altered wheelbase experiments to nitro-powered Camaros, Bovan helped shape the raw, experimental era of Southern California drag racing when factory horsepower wars were redefining the sport. His reaction times were legendary. His cars were feared. And for a time, he was living the racer’s dream. But by the mid-1970s, the money was drying up. After leaving full-time racing, Bovan became entangled with a Costa Mesa auto shop tied to Prasadam Distributors Incorporated (PDI), a network later connected to the Brotherhood of Eternal Love and the Laguna Beach Hare Krishna drug scandal. What followed was a spiral into marijuana trafficking, embezzlement accusations, and a violent kidnapping of investor Alexander Kulik. A failed ransom exchange on Interstate 5 triggered a highway gun battle, humiliation for mob-connected enforcers, and a $125,000 murder contract placed on the former drag racer. On October 22, 1977, outside El Ranchito in Newport Beach, Steve Bovan was shot nine times by a man carrying a 9mm Walther pistol. The killers were not random criminals — they were relocated New York mob witnesses living under federal protection through the United States Marshals Service. Within hours, the drug empire collapsed, arrests followed, and the case became a black eye for Witness Protection. This is the full story of how a Funny Car legend went from nitro glory to mob execution in one of the strangest crossovers between motorsports history, organized crime, and 1970s Southern California crime.