INTERESTING ARTICLE...a MUST READ!!!!
#1
Burning Brakes
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INTERESTING ARTICLE...a MUST READ!!!!
Please take the time to read it..or at least the BOLD parts..some xtra knowledge
hey guys, i came across this article, and i though i would share it...learn how to protect ur car...esp, those of u in NY and New Jersey....it can happen to any of us and the best way is to prevent it, or try.....
Its kinda long winded, but worth the 5 mins to gain a sense of the world around our precious baby.
The part about the VIN numbers is scary, im gonna try to find out how to cover it up...
New York Times: Your Car: A Thief's Wish List
By WALECIA KONRAD
Remember those "no radio" signs people used to tape onto car windows to discourage thieves from breaking in? Back then, the radio was the street criminal's car part of choice. These days you would have a better chance of getting the crooks to pass by if your sign said "no air bags" or "no xenon."
Fashion is fickle, even in the illegal market for items stripped from parked cars. Like department store buyers, today's fences and shady mechanics have different needs than their counterparts did a few years ago.
"First it was radios and hubcaps," said Ed Sparkman of the National Insurance Crime Bureau, a nonprofit organization that works to limit insurance fraud. "Now it's air bags and headlights. Thieves have to go where the market is."
Selling a car part by part has always fetched more for thieves than unloading it whole. But ripping parts out at the curb is tempting on a new level since electronic keys with computer chips have made it more difficult to steal a car in one piece. It is almost impossible to hot-wire most cars made since the late 1990's. Unable to drive off with the new models, thieves go for the parts.
But for a quick and lucrative turnaround, what parts to steal?
The answer depends partly on an increasingly complicated game of cat and mouse. When a part becomes a thieves' favorite, automakers make it harder to steal. Crooks move on to another chunk of the car, and manufacturers must use their inventiveness to try to protect this new target, too.
Radios and Cadillac hubcaps, for example, were hot theft items in the 80's but fell out of favor when manufacturers started selling radios that drivers could take with them and built hubcap locks into cars. There are serial numbers on air bags, but now the insurance industry is pushing for manufacturers to include vehicle identification numbers on them to make it easier to identify stolen goods. To help drivers protect their headlights, Nissan has come out with a theft-deterrent kit that includes special bolts and locks.
Then there is style. Manufacturers are always appealing to the image-conscious with fancy parts and accessories that are expensive to buy or replace. Whatever is lusted after at the moment — like xenon headlights, fancy wheels or global positioning systems — is vulnerable.
Exactly what part of your car you may find missing one day depends on what you drive and where you live. In New York City and northern New Jersey, it's those headlights. "Theft of these things has become absolutely epidemic in the Northeast," said Michael Fella, director of operations for the Melville, N.Y., field office of the National Insurance Crime Bureau.
The lights, which can range from $750 to $1,000 each, are the bluish ones that have become increasingly common on the highways. They use a spark to ignite a tube of xenon gas, and they are brighter and longer-lasting than conventional headlights. Makers of luxury cars like BMW, Mercedes-Benz, Audi and Lexus have been offering the lights on new cars for several years, but in most of these cars removing the lights requires opening the hood, an inconvenience for thieves.
But xenon lights are also a popular item in auto-parts stores, and these aftermarket lights, added by the owner after buying the car, are often easier to remove. So are the xenon lamps that became standard equipment on the Acura TL and Nissan Maxima about two years ago. Thieves can sometimes rip out these lights without opening the hood — and they often cause serious damage to the car's front end in the process.
"Thieves got at one of my customer's lights not once, but twice," said Dan Rheinstein, a repair shop owner in Millwood, N.Y. "They did a total of $3,400 worth of damage. It was heartbreaking. I worked so hard to touch up the paint and make the car look perfect after the first time — and then a few months later it happened again."
If the Northeast is headlight territory, Texas is air-bag country. "Out here, air bags are the radios of yesterday," said Detective Bill Skinner of the Dallas Police Department's Auto Salvage Unit. "They're popular because thieves can just do a smash and grab."
Another reason may be that, according to Detective Skinner, chop shops and auto theft rings specializing in air bags have chosen Texas as a base of operations.
Air bags are a good business for thieves. If an air bag deploys it has to be replaced; it cannot be reused. And to protect people in cars, the bags are made to deploy with even a fairly minor impact.
Several hundred thousand air bags are thought to deploy each year in the United States. Add to that the thousands stolen (though no one has been keeping count) and there is obviously a sizable market for replacements. Replacement air bags are expensive — usually about $1,000 each — and auto insurers will pay for them only if they come from the manufacturer. A garage can get a stolen air bag, however, for $100 or $200.
"At some disreputable repair shops a mechanic will install a stolen air bag bought for a couple of hundred bucks and then bill the insurance company for the full amount," said Mr. Sparkman of the National Insurance Crime Bureau. What's more, drivers who don't have full insurance coverage will often choose to have a second-hand air bag installed to save money. The result is an extremely active market for stolen air bags.
If you drive a Mustang in Dallas, watch out. In one Dallas apartment complex a group of five or six thieves stole both the driver-side and passenger air bags from eight Ford Mustangs, Detective Skinner said. "We've got some high-end crooks that will put in special orders with street criminals," he said. "One guy in particular puts in orders for Mustangs. It's not quite as dramatic as `Gone in 60 Seconds,' but it's the same idea," he said, referring to the 2000 movie that depicted an especially efficient auto thief.
There are many Internet sites selling stolen air bags. Typically the unscrupulous sellers deliver them by mail in plain packages, an illegal technique that can lead police to them. To be shipped legally, air bags must be specially packed and marked as hazardous material, something all legitimate shippers know. "These things basically are bombs," Mr. Sparkman said. "They have a detonator."
What will be the next big thing? "We're keeping an eye on these nifty global positioning systems that are factory-installed on more and more cars," said Pete Moraga, a spokesman for the Insurance Information Network of California, a nonprofit group supported by insurers. "They sit right on the dash, are quite valuable and seem extremely vulnerable."
All of this smashing and grabbing doesn't mean that whole cars aren't still being stolen. Auto theft was up 4.5 percent for the first half of 2002, the latest statistic that was available from the Federal Bureau of Investigation, and even cars loaded with antitheft devices are not safe. "Now criminals simply steal a flat-bed tow truck and haul the car away for parts," said Mikel Longman, a retired Arizona state police officer and director of the Arizona Auto Theft Authority, a state agency financed by insurers.
Another ploy is to pick out a vehicle, copy down its vehicle identification number (federal law dictates that the number be visible on every car, and it is usually on the driver's side of the dashboard), and then go to a dealer of that model posing as the owner and asking for another key. "Some dealers don't check to see if the person is really the owner," Mr. Longman said. "So the thief ends up with a key to your car."
Pity the poor owners of Hondas and Acura Integras in Southern California; they are often victims of another car-theft fashion. Their region is the center of the street-racing craze made famous in "The Fast and the Furious," a movie released in 2001, and now eagerly copied in some other major cities. Racers favor these models, which they soup up with special engines, transmissions, exhaust systems, spoilers and xenon lights (some stolen, some not) and then race in legitimate events or illegally and dangerously on city streets.
"If you own an Accord or Integra, your car definitely has a greater chance of being stolen here," Mr. Moraga said. "The majority end up in the street-racing scene. It's part of the reason the Honda Civic has been on the top 10 most popular stolen car list for the past five years."
And you thought it was the gas mileage.
be safe
big
hey guys, i came across this article, and i though i would share it...learn how to protect ur car...esp, those of u in NY and New Jersey....it can happen to any of us and the best way is to prevent it, or try.....
Its kinda long winded, but worth the 5 mins to gain a sense of the world around our precious baby.
The part about the VIN numbers is scary, im gonna try to find out how to cover it up...
New York Times: Your Car: A Thief's Wish List
By WALECIA KONRAD
Remember those "no radio" signs people used to tape onto car windows to discourage thieves from breaking in? Back then, the radio was the street criminal's car part of choice. These days you would have a better chance of getting the crooks to pass by if your sign said "no air bags" or "no xenon."
Fashion is fickle, even in the illegal market for items stripped from parked cars. Like department store buyers, today's fences and shady mechanics have different needs than their counterparts did a few years ago.
"First it was radios and hubcaps," said Ed Sparkman of the National Insurance Crime Bureau, a nonprofit organization that works to limit insurance fraud. "Now it's air bags and headlights. Thieves have to go where the market is."
Selling a car part by part has always fetched more for thieves than unloading it whole. But ripping parts out at the curb is tempting on a new level since electronic keys with computer chips have made it more difficult to steal a car in one piece. It is almost impossible to hot-wire most cars made since the late 1990's. Unable to drive off with the new models, thieves go for the parts.
But for a quick and lucrative turnaround, what parts to steal?
The answer depends partly on an increasingly complicated game of cat and mouse. When a part becomes a thieves' favorite, automakers make it harder to steal. Crooks move on to another chunk of the car, and manufacturers must use their inventiveness to try to protect this new target, too.
Radios and Cadillac hubcaps, for example, were hot theft items in the 80's but fell out of favor when manufacturers started selling radios that drivers could take with them and built hubcap locks into cars. There are serial numbers on air bags, but now the insurance industry is pushing for manufacturers to include vehicle identification numbers on them to make it easier to identify stolen goods. To help drivers protect their headlights, Nissan has come out with a theft-deterrent kit that includes special bolts and locks.
Then there is style. Manufacturers are always appealing to the image-conscious with fancy parts and accessories that are expensive to buy or replace. Whatever is lusted after at the moment — like xenon headlights, fancy wheels or global positioning systems — is vulnerable.
Exactly what part of your car you may find missing one day depends on what you drive and where you live. In New York City and northern New Jersey, it's those headlights. "Theft of these things has become absolutely epidemic in the Northeast," said Michael Fella, director of operations for the Melville, N.Y., field office of the National Insurance Crime Bureau.
The lights, which can range from $750 to $1,000 each, are the bluish ones that have become increasingly common on the highways. They use a spark to ignite a tube of xenon gas, and they are brighter and longer-lasting than conventional headlights. Makers of luxury cars like BMW, Mercedes-Benz, Audi and Lexus have been offering the lights on new cars for several years, but in most of these cars removing the lights requires opening the hood, an inconvenience for thieves.
But xenon lights are also a popular item in auto-parts stores, and these aftermarket lights, added by the owner after buying the car, are often easier to remove. So are the xenon lamps that became standard equipment on the Acura TL and Nissan Maxima about two years ago. Thieves can sometimes rip out these lights without opening the hood — and they often cause serious damage to the car's front end in the process.
"Thieves got at one of my customer's lights not once, but twice," said Dan Rheinstein, a repair shop owner in Millwood, N.Y. "They did a total of $3,400 worth of damage. It was heartbreaking. I worked so hard to touch up the paint and make the car look perfect after the first time — and then a few months later it happened again."
If the Northeast is headlight territory, Texas is air-bag country. "Out here, air bags are the radios of yesterday," said Detective Bill Skinner of the Dallas Police Department's Auto Salvage Unit. "They're popular because thieves can just do a smash and grab."
Another reason may be that, according to Detective Skinner, chop shops and auto theft rings specializing in air bags have chosen Texas as a base of operations.
Air bags are a good business for thieves. If an air bag deploys it has to be replaced; it cannot be reused. And to protect people in cars, the bags are made to deploy with even a fairly minor impact.
Several hundred thousand air bags are thought to deploy each year in the United States. Add to that the thousands stolen (though no one has been keeping count) and there is obviously a sizable market for replacements. Replacement air bags are expensive — usually about $1,000 each — and auto insurers will pay for them only if they come from the manufacturer. A garage can get a stolen air bag, however, for $100 or $200.
"At some disreputable repair shops a mechanic will install a stolen air bag bought for a couple of hundred bucks and then bill the insurance company for the full amount," said Mr. Sparkman of the National Insurance Crime Bureau. What's more, drivers who don't have full insurance coverage will often choose to have a second-hand air bag installed to save money. The result is an extremely active market for stolen air bags.
If you drive a Mustang in Dallas, watch out. In one Dallas apartment complex a group of five or six thieves stole both the driver-side and passenger air bags from eight Ford Mustangs, Detective Skinner said. "We've got some high-end crooks that will put in special orders with street criminals," he said. "One guy in particular puts in orders for Mustangs. It's not quite as dramatic as `Gone in 60 Seconds,' but it's the same idea," he said, referring to the 2000 movie that depicted an especially efficient auto thief.
There are many Internet sites selling stolen air bags. Typically the unscrupulous sellers deliver them by mail in plain packages, an illegal technique that can lead police to them. To be shipped legally, air bags must be specially packed and marked as hazardous material, something all legitimate shippers know. "These things basically are bombs," Mr. Sparkman said. "They have a detonator."
What will be the next big thing? "We're keeping an eye on these nifty global positioning systems that are factory-installed on more and more cars," said Pete Moraga, a spokesman for the Insurance Information Network of California, a nonprofit group supported by insurers. "They sit right on the dash, are quite valuable and seem extremely vulnerable."
All of this smashing and grabbing doesn't mean that whole cars aren't still being stolen. Auto theft was up 4.5 percent for the first half of 2002, the latest statistic that was available from the Federal Bureau of Investigation, and even cars loaded with antitheft devices are not safe. "Now criminals simply steal a flat-bed tow truck and haul the car away for parts," said Mikel Longman, a retired Arizona state police officer and director of the Arizona Auto Theft Authority, a state agency financed by insurers.
Another ploy is to pick out a vehicle, copy down its vehicle identification number (federal law dictates that the number be visible on every car, and it is usually on the driver's side of the dashboard), and then go to a dealer of that model posing as the owner and asking for another key. "Some dealers don't check to see if the person is really the owner," Mr. Longman said. "So the thief ends up with a key to your car."
Pity the poor owners of Hondas and Acura Integras in Southern California; they are often victims of another car-theft fashion. Their region is the center of the street-racing craze made famous in "The Fast and the Furious," a movie released in 2001, and now eagerly copied in some other major cities. Racers favor these models, which they soup up with special engines, transmissions, exhaust systems, spoilers and xenon lights (some stolen, some not) and then race in legitimate events or illegally and dangerously on city streets.
"If you own an Accord or Integra, your car definitely has a greater chance of being stolen here," Mr. Moraga said. "The majority end up in the street-racing scene. It's part of the reason the Honda Civic has been on the top 10 most popular stolen car list for the past five years."
And you thought it was the gas mileage.
![Smile](https://acurazine.com/forums/images/smilies/smile.gif)
be safe
big
#3
trying to get a lil V-I
they forgot to mention the huge problem of Integra Type-Rs getting stolen for their engines.
Good article...pretty much describes everything we already know.
Wish they would tell us how to prevent future occurances..
Good article...pretty much describes everything we already know.
Wish they would tell us how to prevent future occurances..
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#9
Never thought about covering the vin because I always thought I would get ticketed if a cop just happened to walk by my parked car and saw that I had mine covered. Knew about the xenons though..for a while we had posts every week or so about someone getting theirs stolen or knowing someone that had it happen.
#10
Safety Car
last night...or maybe the night before...saw in the news that a bunch of guys went to a caddy dealership, one guy used an escalade to clear a path, and the other guys got in other escalades and just dove of. What a direct approach
![Wink](https://acurazine.com/forums/images/smilies/wink.gif)
#11
Unregistered Member
Hey, what about the "newer" TL? Did Acura do anything when they changed the headlights to make them harder to steal?
I haven't heard of any of the lights being stolen out of the facelifted TL......
I haven't heard of any of the lights being stolen out of the facelifted TL......
#12
The Third Ball
Join Date: Sep 2002
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My old accord was broken into and my dash was ripped open so they could steal my cd player and they took all my cds.
It sucks and you feel violated and you wish you could catch the bastards and beat them to within and inch of their lives but...
If someone really wants to steal something they are going to do it period.
Thats why I insurance. But I never leave anything in open view in my car anymore, i only take burns of my cds ( cause insurance doesnt really cover those items) and those cds get hidden when im not in my car. Plus i have my windows tinted making it harder to look in at a glance.
You can be cautious and it lessens your odds, but sadly you cant stop it.
It sucks and you feel violated and you wish you could catch the bastards and beat them to within and inch of their lives but...
If someone really wants to steal something they are going to do it period.
Thats why I insurance. But I never leave anything in open view in my car anymore, i only take burns of my cds ( cause insurance doesnt really cover those items) and those cds get hidden when im not in my car. Plus i have my windows tinted making it harder to look in at a glance.
You can be cautious and it lessens your odds, but sadly you cant stop it.
#17
Originally posted by moomaster_99
If you cover your VIN, it is a ticket in California.
If you cover your VIN, it is a ticket in California.
everythings a ticket in california
I think I saw why the lights on CL/TL are so easy to pry out when I worked with mine recently.
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