Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Phoenix police find 1,200 stolen catalytic converters

- Bob Christie

PHOENIX – An Arizona man was facing multiple theft charges Friday after detectives found more than 1,200 catalytic converters packed into a storage unit, a case that is an example of a national surge in thefts of auto parts that play a crucial role in reducing vehicle emissions.

The discovery followed a monthslong investigat­ion that began with a January tip that someone was storing stolen catalytic converters in an industrial area near Phoenix Sky Harbor Internatio­nal Airport.

“We were very surprised at the amount in there,” Phoenix police Detective Adam Popelier said in a police video taken Thursday as officers were pulling converters from the jampacked storage locker.

The 48-year-old man who police said was buying and selling the converters was charged with 40 counts of theft and might face additional charges.

The huge rise in catalytic converter thefts across the nation has hit tens of thousands of car and truck owners in the pocketbook and frustrated police, who are faced with a crime that takes just minutes to commit and is difficult to solve even if they find the stolen parts.

Catalytic converters are not imprinted at the factory with serial numbers and stolen converters end up on a black market where they are chopped open for the valuable metals they contain.

Replacing one can cost a motorist from $1,000 to $3,000, according to the National Insurance Crime Bureau, an insurance industry group that works to fight insurance fraud and crime. Police said thieves can get from $100 to $150 for each converter.

The insurance group counted just 3,969 reports of stolen catalytic converters in 2019, more than 17,000 in 2020 and more than 52,000 last year.

Lawmakers across the nation have taken notice, introducin­g legislatio­n designed to make it harder for criminals to unload their loot. According to the National Insurance Crime Bureau, 150 bills have been introduced this year in 36 states and enacted in 16 states.

That includes Arizona, where Republican Gov. Doug Ducey signed a bill this month that makes possession of a catalytic converter in many instances a crime and adds detailed reporting requiremen­ts for scrap dealers that buy legitimate used devices. They must mark the item with the donor vehicle’s serial number and retain it for at least a week in original condition.

Scrap dealers caught with unregister­ed or stolen converters face a $500 fine for the first offense, a $2,000 fine for a second and at least double that for each additional time they are caught. Those possessing or trying to sell a used catalytic converter that don’t meet new requiremen­ts could face a six-month jail sentence.

Federal legislatio­n is also in the works. Indiana Rep. Jim Baird is sponsoring a bill backed by the National Insurance Crime Bureau that would require serial numbers on new devices, offer grants for programs to stamp numbers on existing cars and trucks and make it easier to prosecute thefts.

Insurance often does not cover losses. Someone carrying just liability coverage or liability and collision is on the hook for the full bill. Even with comprehens­ive coverage, there is a deductible that might be too high enough that it is not worth filing a claim.

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