• Hey Guest!
    British Car Forum has been supporting enthusiasts for over 25 years by providing a great place to share our love for British cars. You can support our efforts by upgrading your membership for less than the dues of most car clubs. There are some perks with a member upgrade!

    **Upgrade Now**
    (PS: Upgraded members don't see this banner, nor will you see the Google ads that appear on the site.)
Tips
Tips

A distinction we could do without.

Basil

Administrator
Staff member
Boss
Offline
In this morning's paper there was a story about Stolen cars in Albuquerque being used to commit other crimes, such as drive by shootings, robberies, etc. The article says that, according to the National Insurance Crime Bureau, the greater Albuquerque area has the "highest per-capita rate of auto thefts in the country." Last year there were 7,684 car thefts here. Here's a picture showing locations of auto thefts in just a one week period.

car_thefts.jpg
 
Sounds like there's an element there that needs removing. Seems like it's not just a random thing, too many in a short period, sounds like it might be gang related. Is Albuquerque police force short handed? I have a solution to the problem if their caught, but I've been told that my Medieval thoughts are not proper in our Modern Educated?? society. :rolleyes2: PJ
 
I’d be parking my car with a pitbull left inside :rolleye:
 
Yes to the query of police staffing. Not only is it playing out in crime, to drive the interstates within the city limits is insane. Admittedly I travel about 10 miles over the speed limit just to feel safe. At 65mph, I’m a target of the 80 mph plus drivers. Even the regular streets are typed as go as fast as you can and ignore the rules of the road. During heavy travel I find that the breakdown lane becomes drivable. It’s fairly off-putting if you’re in the right lane. Okay, need to return to mellow status. Must say coming home from Albuquerque via Rt. 66 is very calming, most of the time.
 
My 1984 Audi Quattro was stolen and later recovered. Police told me they use it for drug stuff because when they're caught - as they always are - their car is confiscated, so - they steal yours, steal someone elses's plate and go about their business. Another law with unintended consequences and the reason most airports down in Florida will not rent planes any more.
 
My 1984 Audi Quattro was stolen and later recovered. Police told me they use it for drug stuff because when they're caught - as they always are - their car is confiscated, so - they steal yours, steal someone elses's plate and go about their business. Another law with unintended consequences and the reason most airports down in Florida will not rent planes any more.

I've been lucky (so far), but a couple years ago a co-worker had his brand new pickup truck stolen right for our work parking lot in broad daylight! These guys are bold!
 
Speaking of cars being stolen, has anyone installed hidden gps tracking devices in their cars?
 
How do they manage to defeat the high tech keys? I thought the new keys made that very difficult or is that just so you have to visit the dealers to get replacement keys.

David
 
I have always liked the low tech approach to car theft, a battery disconnect and/or a fuel shut off valve.
 
Get a car with a stick. I understand the stats show they're stolen much less often because most folks these days never learn to drive with one. The had some guy here get carjacked in a parking lot last summer and the two guys who did it couldn't get out of the lot before the police the owner called arrived. Granted it probably wouldn't stop a professional thief looking for a specific make/model, but the causal crook looking for a ride may leave it alone.
 
Get a car with a stick. I understand the stats show they're stolen much less often because most folks these days never learn to drive with one. The had some guy here get carjacked in a parking lot last summer and the two guys who did it couldn't get out of the lot before the police the owner called arrived. Granted it probably wouldn't stop a professional thief looking for a specific make/model, but the causal crook looking for a ride may leave it alone.

Yup, sticks are for more than starting fires or walking.
 
I have always liked the low tech approach to car theft, a battery disconnect and/or a fuel shut off valve.

I've both on the Lotus cars. One of the many unlabeled switches on the dash is for the fuel pump and the battery cutoff is in the trunk. It'd take a Jerr-Dan or similar to steal it... by the time the truck would be in position there would be some loud reports and some small holes in stuff. "Be careful what you shoot at, Ryan. Some things in here don't react well to bullets."
 
Back
Top