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#1
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Bill Kiene wrote:
Someone came in the back door of my fly shop today and stole my jacket. In the pocket was the keys to my car so they stole that too. The CHP told me that our report number was 1777 which is how many cars that were reported stolen today. I wonder, was that in Sacramento County or in California? Be careful out there.................. How declasse...a worthy thief would have taken a tray of flies... -- Email sent to is never read. |
#2
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In Washington, you have to be caught stealing a car five times before you do
any jail time at all. I don't know why we are so lenient with car thieves. It's not doing them (usually young kids) any real good at all. We're sending a message that crime is an acceptable recreational activity- as long as you don't get caught more than four times. I once almost began doing business with a young woman who had a real scam going. (I found out about the scam and severed the relationship immediately). She and a couple of friends were receiving stolen cars and parting them out. They had a group of young kids, crack addicts all, who did the actual stealing. When the kids brought in a car, they would get maybe $10 cash and enough crack to get through one more day until they could steal another car. Too bad, they had some excellent prices on body and mechanical parts. (When I passed my discovery along to the cops, they said they already knew about the operation. Not too many days later, they were busted). The most ingenious group of boosters we had up this way had a real program! They would steal Honda Accords, take the cars to a warehouse, strip all the doors, trunks, hoods, seats, etc and then park the chassis out along a public street someplace. Of course, 90% of the owners had insurance, and the insurance companies would pay off the owners and then run the chassis through an insurance auction. The thieves would go to the auction, buy up the chassis for next to nothing, *get a legitimate title* to the car in the process, and then take the car back to the warehouse and reattach the exact same parts that came off it in the first place. They got away with this almost forever, making some huge bucks along the way. Finally, somebody asked the obvious question- "Why is the same group of people buying every single stripped out Honda that goes through the auction?" They tracked down a few of the cars and discovered that the body parts matched the VIN number of the chassis....and the jig was up. Hope you get your rig back soon, and without damage. |
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