Official: The FIA will not sanction any teams after Haas’ request for a revision
After asserting its annual right to review, Haas hoped that sanctions would be imposed following the additional evidence provided by the American team. Today, the FIA has delivered its verdict and will not penalize any driver, leaving Nico Hülkenberg permanently in 11th place in the United States Grand Prix.

Haas has filed a complaint during the Brazilian Grand Prix weekend regarding the race in Austin, claiming that several cars had exceeded track limits at turn 6 but had not been penalized.
The report from the sports commissioners at the hearing confirmed that members from Haas, Williams, Aston Martin, Red Bull, and the FIA were present, as well as Ferrari and McLaren. The latter two teams requested to attend as “interested parties”.
Williams, Aston Martin and Red Bull have been summoned to the hearing, but there will be no change in the final standings, after the sports commissioners determined that there was no new relevant evidence to support Haas’ claims.
This examination concludes that the images regarding Sargeant, Perez, Stroll, and Albon were not significant, nor new, nor relevant, and were available to Haas at the time of the decision. However, it is also worth noting from this interview that the commissioners admitted that Albon seemed to have exceeded the track limits, but the lack of surveillance footage prevented them from fairly judging each car on that part of the Austin track. They declared it was entirely unsatisfactory not to be able to monitor rule violations and recommended that a solution to prevent this widespread problem from recurring be swiftly implemented.
For these reasons, the examination was rejected by the commissioners who noted that the process was too light to move on to the next phase. No points therefore for Haas, who remains last in the constructor’s ranking, 4 points behind Alfa Romeo. Haas also does not have the right to appeal this verdict, which marks the end of the matter, unless they choose to seek redress from a higher institution.