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Thieves Keep Car Owners Walking


Thieves Keep Car Owners Walking

Anthony Fontanelle
October 4, 2007

Thieves are making more and more car owners walk. Because of the prevalence of auto theft, thieves keep car owners on their toes. Literally.

Shannon Jordan had to walk to work on Tuesday, a blustery fall day. Her Subaru was recently stolen. It was not the Subaru distributor rotor but the radiance of the car that lured the thief. Brad Thompson, meanwhile, is also walking to work these days. His Toyota Camry was stolen – for the third time in two months – from his North Side apartment complex, reported Spokesman Review. Thompson's Toyota has been found twice before. But not this time – hitherto.

In the last couple of months, about 500 cars have been stolen in Spokane, up slightly from last year. According to authorities, patterns of thievery change based on arrests. They added the chronic problem has been made worse by weak sentencing for those who steal automobiles – many of whom are repeat offenders – and not enough people to investigate all the thefts.

"The jail is so backed up with violent criminals that those who commit property crimes aren't held," said Spokane police Sgt. Keith Cummings. "It's not too sexy, so to speak, so the jail time isn't much," Cummings said.

Authorities stressed that when they arrest some of the more prolific car thieves, a drop in stolen cars can be detected immediately, but only for a short time. Until last July, a person had to be caught seven times before they are imprisoned.

It was altered because the Legislature adopted House Bill 1001. The said law mandates more stringent punishment. "The major difference is how previous offenses are counted," said Spokane County Deputy Prosecutor Stefani Collins. To note, an individual convicted once of auto theft gets a longer sentence with the next conviction. "Hopefully the new law will have a deterrent effect," Collins said.

California is first in the nation for auto theft; Texas, Florida, Arizona, Michigan, and Washington, followed respectively. Meanwhile, Idaho is ranked 44th in the nation. Based on the National Insurance Crime Bureau’s data, Spokane is 17th in the country according to a per-capita calculation of cities. Kootenai County fielded 82 stolen vehicle reports in 2005, 71 in 2006 and 55 so far this year, Kootenai County Sheriff's Capt. Ben Wolfinger said.

And there is good news in Coeur d'Alene, where auto theft dropped 40 percent, from 87 during the first eight months of 2006 to 52 during the same period this year. The reason: Police caught a group of people who were stealing cars, said Liz Peterson, a crime analyst for the Coeur d'Alene Police Department. "Usually it stays pretty consistent, but you get spikes,” she said.

“Many cars that are reported stolen are vehicles that have been loaned to acquaintances who don't return them when expected,” Peterson said. "The other day, a young girl reported her vehicle stolen. She had just misplaced it at the mall. In other cases, people go out drinking and by the end of the night have forgotten where they parked.”

Cummings oversees property crime investigations. He noted most auto thefts in Spokane can be tied to drugs. "What they are being used for most of the time is a meth taxi," Cummings said. "People break into the cars, rifle through the inside and take anything of value. They drive it somewhere, transfer their stolen stuff to the next car, and the cycle continues. Investigators know the cars aren't being stripped and sold for parts because police recover more than 80 percent of them.”

National Insurance Crime Bureau Spokesman Frank Scafidi said that the national average for recovered stolen cars is 59 percent.

Source:  Amazines.com




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