USA TODAY US Edition

Thieves can tap into key fobs to steal your car

Phone-sized device subverts security tech

- Nathan Bomey @NathanBome­y USA TODAY

A national watchdog group identified a device that lets thieves steal cars that use key fobs.

The device, which allows a person to open car doors, start vehicles and drive them away suggests the auto industry is entering a perilous frontier in which techsavvy criminals can bypass the keyless theft-prevention countermea­sures installed on certain re- cent models.

The National Insurance Crime Bureau said it purchased the device “via a third-party security expert from an overseas company” that developed it “to provide manufactur­ers and other antitheft organizati­ons the ability to test the vulnerabil­ity of various vehicles’ systems.”

The so-called Relay Attack device demonstrat­es how thieves recently stole vehicles that were supposed to be extremely difficult to swipe.

The boxy device, about the size of a smartphone, is used to capture a signal from a nearby key fob before using the signal to gain entry illegally.

The NICB said it tested the device on used cars at participat­ing dealership­s, an auto auction, employee vehicles and other cars.

In 19 of its 35 tests, the device opened the vehicle. In 18 of those 19 entries, it was able to start the vehicle and drive away.

In other words, more than 50% of the time, the device allowed the would-be perpetrato­r to steal the vehicle.

“We’ve now seen for ourselves that these devices work,” NICB CEO Joe Wehrle said in a statement. “Maybe they don’t work on all makes and models but certainly on enough that car thieves can target and steal them with relative ease. And the scary part is that there’s no warning or explanatio­n for the owner.”

The NICB said thieves use several varieties of wireless theft devices.

 ?? NATIONAL INSURANCE CRIME BUREAU ?? A keyless device acquired by the National Insurance Crime Bureau gained entry to, started and drove more than half of 35 vehicles in a test.
NATIONAL INSURANCE CRIME BUREAU A keyless device acquired by the National Insurance Crime Bureau gained entry to, started and drove more than half of 35 vehicles in a test.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States