Anonymous wrote:This is probably a stupid question, but presumably these cars have the push-button ignitions. How exactly do the cars get stolen so quickly?
Anonymous wrote:MANY years ago, my aunt in NJ had her 70's something mustang stolen and it was found in a shipping container on a dock in NY, I don't recall where it was headed. She continued to to drive it until dementia won and now my cousin drives it!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is probably a stupid question, but do you think these gangs are the ones responsible for all the "joyriding?"
No those are dumb kids seeing what they can get away with.
BUT I'm betting if you get a rep for being good at stealing cars for joyriding (and the guts to do it), you may be recruited by the gangs fencing cars. Which is why we should do more about the joyriding, because that's how it starts.
Anonymous wrote:This is probably a stupid question, but do you think these gangs are the ones responsible for all the "joyriding?"
Anonymous wrote:This is probably a stupid question, but do you think these gangs are the ones responsible for all the "joyriding?"
Anonymous wrote:This is probably a stupid question, but presumably these cars have the push-button ignitions. How exactly do the cars get stolen so quickly?
WASHINGTON — In January, thieves made off with two Jeep Wranglers parked on a Southeast DC street in a matter of seconds.
The overnight thefts on South Carolina Avenue, Southeast, were caught on camera. Video shows the thieves breaking in and stealing one of the Jeeps. Then they return about a half hour later and steal another Jeep parked across the street
One of those stolen Jeeps belonged to Nick Cioffi, who says he got a call from MPD a few weeks ago with some answers.
"Customs agents had found the car, and they found our neighbor's Jeep also, and a Corvette of all things inside a shipping container in the port of Baltimore that was headed to West Africa," said Cioffi. Something officials say happens often.
Its latest data, from fiscal year 2024, shows the Baltimore Field Office ranked second in the country with 250 stolen vehicle recoveries. The most common vehicle model recovered in fiscal year 2024, were Toyota Highlanders, followed by Jeeps.
Customs and Border Protection in Baltimore says, West Africa is a leading destination for stolen cars because of vessel traffic to West African ports, and transnational criminal organizations that trade in stolen vehicles have well-established supply chains in the area.