• Dubai Police adds a Mansory Revuelto to its fleet.
  • Forged carbon parts dominate the exterior design.
  • Like other Dubai Police cars, it wears white and green.

Dubai Police clearly don’t believe in easing off the throttle. Barely two months after they welcomed a Mansory-tuned Ferrari Purosangue to their ever-growing fleet of exotica, they’ve gone back to the same controversial tuner for round two. This time, it’s a Lamborghini. And not just any Lamborghini.

Read: Look Away Now, The Revuelto Has Been Mansoried

Just recently, Mansory unveiled its most extreme take on the Revuelto, the Carbonado X. Built as a one-off, the car features a fully forged carbon fiber body, all-new panels, an extreme aero kit, and an upgraded powertrain.

The Revuelto delivered to the Dubai Police isn’t quite as extreme as the Carbonado X, but compared to a standard car, it still looks like it bench-presses them for fun.

 A Traffic Cop Just Got A 1,001 HP Company Car

At the front of the Lamborghini is a newly designed hood with carbon fiber elements and a small illuminated Mansory badge. The tuner has also added a new splitter made from forged carbon, along with small canards on either side.

Looks To Match The Performance

Changes to the body include new forged-carbon fins behind the front wheels, connected to a set of custom side skirts. Mansory has also equipped the Revuelto with new wing mirror covers and added a set of aftermarket wheels to the car.

They come with gloss black spokes, red center caps, and red-painted brake calipers peeking through. There’s even a carbon fiber lip integrated into the wheels themselves. It’s unapologetically showy, which feels entirely appropriate for a police force that treats its patrol fleet like a rolling motor show stand.

 A Traffic Cop Just Got A 1,001 HP Company Car

Mansory’s tweaks continue at the rear with subtle fins sitting above the exhausts and a unique rear diffuser. Tying everything together is a white paint scheme with the local police department’s dark green livery, a reminder that yes, this is technically for public service.

As for what’s happening beneath the carbon weave, there’s no confirmation of any performance upgrades, not that it needs them, as the factory setup pairs a 6.5-liter V12 with three electric motors for a combined 1,001 hp and a 0-62 mph (100km/h) time of 2.5 seconds.

Still, it would be surprising if Mansory resisted fitting at least a louder exhaust, if only to announce its arrival three blocks early. What the Dubai Police actually plan to do with it, beyond drawing crowds, remains anyone’s guess.