Springfield News-Sun

For car thieves, Toronto is a ‘candy store’

- Vjosa Isai

TORONTO — Whenever Dennis Wilson wants to take a drive in his new SUV, he has to set aside an extra 15 minutes. That’s about how long it takes to remove the car’s steering wheel club, undo four tire locks and lower a yellow bollard before backing out of his driveway.

His Honda CR-V is also fitted with two alarm systems, a vehicle tracking device and, for good measure, four Apple Airtags. Its remote-access key fob rests in a Faraday bag, to jam illicit unlocking signals.

As a final touch, he mounted two motion-sensitive floodlight­s on his house and aimed them at the driveway in his modest neighborho­od in Toronto.

But all of these security gadgets, Wilson is convinced, will do no more than delay what seems inevitable: Toronto’s seasoned auto thieves won’t be deterred by the defensive gear, and they’ll make off with this Honda SUV just as they did with its predecesso­r — and its insurance replacemen­t, which they returned to steal.

“By no means do I think that I’ve stopped them,” Wilson said. “All I’ve done is made it take an extra 10 minutes to steal my car.”

While there has been a surge in car thefts across Canada — up 24% in 2022, the most recent year nationwide statistics were available — the scourge has hit the Toronto area particular­ly hard, creating a mix of paranoia, vigilance and resentment.

Car thefts in Canada’s largest city are so pervasive — up 150% in the past six years — that the issue has become something of a common bond among vehicle owners.

If not a victim themselves of a theft, or thefts, many people seem to know someone whose car was swiped, and just about everyone can instantly recall one of the car theft headlines that news outlets have had plenty of opportunit­y to publish.

Social media groups have formed to crowdsourc­e help for car sightings. But the comments are filled with people telling owners to resign themselves to the fact that their car is probably already in a shipping container headed overseas.

“Organized crime is becoming more brazen, and the internatio­nal black market for the stolen cars is expanding,” said Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, speaking in February in Ottawa at a hastily convened auto theft summit.

The meeting was intended

to reassure Canadians that the government was aware of the issue and that it was considerin­g a number of responses, including increasing penalties for auto thieves, investing in the border agency and banning imports of key fob hacking devices.

The government is not only aware of the problem, it also hasn’t been spared: Two government-issued Toyota Highlander­s were stolen three times in Ottawa from the current and previous justice ministers.

Pierre Poilievre, the leader of the Conservati­ve Party, has repeatedly criticized Trudeau on the issue, blaming the government for being excessivel­y lenient in bail and sentencing for offenders.

The police have received new funding, including for better surveillan­ce equipment, but the profit motive

for thieves — as much as 20,000 Canadian dollars ($14,800) per car — has, so far, made the problem intractabl­e.

Car thefts have escalated to “national crisis” levels, according to the Insurance Bureau of Canada, an industry group, which said insurers paid out a record 1.2 billion Canadian dollars (about $890 million) in theft claims in 2022.

For victims, it’s a dizzying, and sometimes traumatizi­ng, experience.

“I was not able to digest the truth that the car had been stolen,” said Kamran Hussain, whose leased 2022 Toyota Highlander was stolen in January. Hussain’s work as a telecom field sales representa­tive requires him to have access to a car. He’s borrowing one from a friend while he weighs what to do next.

“Either I have to buy a new car or I have to switch jobs,” he said. “I have no other choice.”

Demand for vehicle tracking from insurers in Ontario has about doubled business at Tag Tracking, a Montreal-based company, in the past two years, said Freddy Marcantoni­o, its vice president. Quebec insurers often require the Tag system for high-risk cars in the province, which for decades has grappled with auto thefts largely because many thieves favor Montreal’s port for getting their hot wheels quickly out of the country.

Thanks in part to the wellknown prevalence of tracking systems in Quebec, thieves have turned to Toronto for easier pickings.

“It’s like getting a credit card and telling a kid to go in a candy store and buy whatever you want, and that’s why they moved to Ontario,” Marcantoni­o said. “It’s a free market for them there.”

But as criminals have adapted their behavior — “I like to say they have Ph.d.s in cars theft,” Marcantoni­o said — so have Toronto’s car owners, with many motivated to take a step as simple as clearing the junk out of their garages so they can stow their cars at night.

Homeowners are increasing­ly looking for solutions to protect their driveways, too, with some winning the praise of police for installing bollards, as Wilson has done.

Last year, Achoy Ladrick founded Bollard Boys GTA — for Greater Toronto Area, and an initialism unfortunat­ely shared with the popular video game Grand Theft Auto.

“With this company, I’ve been able to bring that confidence back, bring that peace of mind back to people,” said Ladrick, 23, adding that one client installed four bollards after three Range Rover thefts.

For the exasperate­d Wilson, there has been one recent consolatio­n to being a Toronto car owner: This year’s mild winter means he hasn’t often had to pull out his heat gun or de-icer spray to unfreeze his multiple locks.

Given that he bikes to work — and given all that is required for him to try to fend off the thieves who hanker for his Honda — he said his mind is made up on what his next move will be if he is victimized again.

“If they steal this car, I think I’m done,” he said, adding, “When they come with their antenna and they put it by the window, the only two fobs they’re going to pick up are the two cars that they’ve already stolen. I left those for them.”

 ?? IAN WILLMS / FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Dennis Wilson, whose theft prevention measures now include a bollard, wheel and steering wheel locks, and four Apple Airtags after his previous two cars were stolen in Toronto.
IAN WILLMS / FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES Dennis Wilson, whose theft prevention measures now include a bollard, wheel and steering wheel locks, and four Apple Airtags after his previous two cars were stolen in Toronto.

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