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Politics

With automotive costs surging, yours is a chief goal for thieves

RubberBall Productions | Brand X Pictures | Getty Images

You can blame the Covid pandemic for another thing: an increase in car thefts.

Vehicle thefts in the United States rose 9% year over year to 873,000, the highest number in more than a decade, according to National Insurance Crime Bureau statistics provided by CNBC’s American Greed.

The pandemic created a “perfect storm” of conditions for the increase in car thefts, said NICB President and CEO David Glawe.

“We have a lot of disenfranchised youth who are unemployed and outreach programs are being closed or restricted because of Covid,” he said. “There is frustration and anger in society. We are also seeing restrictions on public safety and the withdrawal of proactive police forces due to budget constraints.”

Vehicles are also particularly valuable these days. Due to the tight supply and strong demand after the pandemic, used car prices have increased by almost 30% compared to the previous year.

The rise in thefts started slowly and coincided with the start of the pandemic in March 2020. They accelerated until last June when the first wave of Covid lockdowns subsided and a second wave loomed. In November, monthly thefts were 18% ahead of 2019.

The biggest jump was in Chicago, where vehicle thefts rose by 134% last year, the NICB said. The Chicago police said the number of carjackings had doubled.

“This has been a year that has presented law enforcement with numerous challenges,” Chicago Police Commissioner David Brown said in a January statement announcing the numbers.

The numbers have leveled off a bit as pandemic restrictions have eased, but Chicago police data released earlier this month shows thefts are still 9% higher than a year ago.

Elsewhere, thefts rose 68% in New York City and 50% in Washington, DC, the NICB said.

Hot goods

Criminals have long understood how lucrative trading in vehicles can be. An extreme example of another type of vehicle crime in 2014 was serial fraudster and internet influencer TR Wright III, who portrayed himself as an arms dealer and an internationally mysterious man.

“All of the Instagram photos showed this person with fancy cars, guns, high-end clothing, high-end vehicles, yachts, jets traveling around the world,” said James Reed, agent for the US Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, opposite “American Greed.”

Wright, 36, admitted to being part of a conspiracy in which he bought a 2008 Lamborghini Gallardo with a salvage title at a bargain price of $ 76,000, deliberately ditched it, and raised nearly $ 170,000 in insurance revenue.

Wright pleaded guilty to two counts of conspiracy in 2018, in a far-reaching scheme that affected not only vehicles but boats and planes as well. Wright, who is serving a five-year prison sentence, told American Greed that he made even more money than prosecutors claim.

“It depends how you do the math, but if you took a total loss, let’s say somewhere between $ 30 million and $ 40 million,” Wright said.

But also much smaller crooks can kill in other ways on the vehicle market, especially with today’s high prices. There is a free market for most cars and trucks and their parts.

While Wright bought his Lamborghini through a company he controlled, it was remarkably easy for criminals to simply steal vehicles. According to the NICB, more than 10% of the stolen vehicles in 2019 – the last year for which full figures are available – had the keys left inside.

How to thwart the thieves

Since almost all cases lead to an insured event, every policyholder suffers in the form of higher premiums. This is why the NICB urges vehicle owners to protect themselves, especially when the crooks are so active.

Here are some tips, some of which are common sense:

  • Take your keys out of the ignition lock when you park the vehicle, or if your vehicle has a remote control key, keep it with you even if you only get out of the vehicle for a short time.
  • Close your doors and windows and park in a well-lit area.
  • Do not leave valuables or other items that might attract the attention of thieves in your car. This also includes your garage door opener.
  • Consider keeping a picture of your vehicle registration on your phone instead of leaving the actual document in the glove box.
  • Think of installing a car alarm, as well as a kill switch that can immobilize a stolen vehicle.
  • Consider buying a GPS tracker that can help authorities find your vehicle.

You may not own a six-digit Italian sports car, but almost anything you drive is a hot commodity these days.

See social media star TR Wright III lead a brazen plot to fame and fortune fraud and hear his own words from prison. Catch a BRAND NEW episode of “American Greed” on CNBC only on Monday, June 21st at 10pm ET / PT.

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Business

How Id Thieves Took My Spouse for a Experience

Insurance companies regularly check your balance when you sign up. It was therefore confusing that Progressive would have issued my wife with a policy without her thawing her file. But TransUnion was listed as a “financial responsibility provider” – an amusing euphemism, if you know how long consumer advocates have been complaining about insurance companies using credit data to set interest rates – and my wife’s frozen credit file sure showed Progressive pinged it this month.

How? Incredibly, an exception often allows insurance companies to check your balance even when you don’t want to have anything to do with it. We learned that this exception meant Progressive could put itself on my wife’s file – which in turn helped someone like us pick the pocket of New York State and its taxpayers.

Progressive, in his wisdom, believed my wife was responsible enough to warrant cover. Fortunately, Mr. Pasternak paid! The second page of our welcome package said that “the authorization you gave for your first installment” should come from a bank account with his name on it.

So meet our new best friend. With a name like Shiran Pasternak he was a quick internet search away. Was he the thief? We wondered. But if so, he hid it pretty well. Like my wife, he had a “Welcome to Progressive” package and notes from the state about a mysterious unemployment claim that he had never submitted. (The bank account and routing numbers in his Progressive package were identical to ours, but had no connection with any of the institutions where either of us did our financial business. With the numbers cut off, it was impossible to find out if they were from someone else or were invented.)

After we put all of this together, Mr. Pasternak – who happened to be a former New York Times employee – in Irvington, NY, took a breath of relief and let me find out what had happened to all of us.

This is how it works.

Auto insurers – even those you don’t use – already know a lot about you. They share damage information with each other in order to weed out unprofitable or reckless customers who try to switch to another provider. You can also access your driver’s license number, your current auto policy data, and the make and model of your vehicle. Often times, they buy this information from states (which end up sending money back instantly if buyers are negligent and unemployment fraud increases).

Insurers want to make applying for a policy as easy as possible. Once you fill in information, they’ll be happy to help and fill in some of these gaps for you. For some unfortunate victims, it was as easy for the scammers as copying the driver’s license number that appeared, although more technical know-how was usually required.