The 21-year-old driver, whose father is a
fertiliser billionaire, angered the team when images of a female
passenger being groped in the back of a car appeared on his
Instagram feed.
The footage was swiftly deleted and Mazepin apologised, with
Haas addressing the situation internally, but Steiner said in a
column for www.the-race.com http://www.therace.com that the
matter was "not done and dusted."
"This is a young man who needs to grow up and for sure we have
dealt with this and we will continue to deal with this," he
said.
"We are not saying that this was OK and letting him get away
with it. We are educating him and will keep on educating him for
his future. There will be consequences if this or something
similar happens again.
"We have put things in place that will help him to get better
and make sure this doesn't happen again; not to make the same
mistake again, because this was a clear mistake."
The hashtag #WeSayNoToMazepin has spread on Twitter since the
incident.
Steiner, whose other driver in an all-new lineup is Ferrari
great Michael Schumacher's 21-year-old son Mick, said he was
aware of the social media response.
"People have an opinion, that's fine, also internally people
didn't like what happened, and this is why we continue to take
this seriously," he added.
"This is a distraction that we don't want, but sometimes these
things happen."
(Reporting by Alan Baldwin, editing by Christian Radnedge)
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