The Star Malaysia

Stripped bare

Police uncover godown used by syndicates to store stolen vehicle parts

- By LOURDES CHARLES and A. RUBAN newsdesk@thestar.com.my

PETALING JAYA: The battle against lorry and car thefts got a boost with the discovery of a godown used by syndicates to strip stolen vehicles of their parts and the arrest of 12 syndicate members in Selangor and Perak.

Selangor police said the break came when three suspects were nabbed in Rawang while they were trying to steal a lorry. Another was arrested in Sabak Bernam.

This led police to the godown in Simpang in Perak on Saturday where eight more suspects were picked up.

At the godown, police recovered more than 1,000 vehicle parts said to be worth tens of millions of ringgit.

Since 2010, an average of 150 vehicles have been reported stolen daily across the country.

Police have said that vehicle thefts involve several syndicates working together but avoiding direct contact with each other, making it difficult to cripple their operations.

SHAH ALAM: Police have seized more than 1,000 vehicle parts worth tens of millions of ringgit at a godown in Perak and arrested 12 members of a syndicate.

But the parts were just a fraction of what had been cannibalis­ed from stolen vehicles.

According to the police, an average of 150 vehicles a day have been stolen across the country since 2010.

Selangor police chief Datuk Tun Hisan Tun Hamzah said three suspects were arrested in Rawang last Thursday when they were trying to steal a lorry.

Another was arrested in Sabak Bernam.

They led a raiding party to a godown at Simpang in Perak on Saturday where eight more suspects were picked up.

Police recovered 1,101 lorry engines, 102 car engines and hundreds of cars and lorries which had been stripped bare.

Four of the suspects were Bangladesh­is and the rest Malaysians, including a woman, Tun Hisan told reporters here yesterday.

Police have said that vehicle theft involves several syndicates working in tandem, each avoiding direct contact with the others, thus making it difficult to cripple their operations.

Different syndicates are involved in stealing a vehicle, moving it and cannibalis­ing parts or selling it either in the country or overseas.

The older vehicles are cannibalis­ed while the new models are usually exported to neighbouri­ng countries as well as Europe and Africa. Four-wheel drives are reported to be especially in demand in the Middle East because of the desert conditions.

Referring to the latest case, Tun Hisan believed that the syndicate had been active for at least 13 years because one of the lorries recovered had been reported missing in 1999.

He said that police learned of the syndicate after arresting several of its members last year under the Emergency Ordinance.

The suspects have since been charged.

Tun Hisan said police were trying to trace the owners of the vehicles and engines which were still intact.

In a related developmen­t, police recovered stolen lorry cabins worth more than RM100,000 during a raid at a workshop in Changkat Jering, Perak.

Perak police chief Deputy Comm Datuk Mohd Shukri Dahlan said the recovery followed investigat­ions on the Azlan gang, of which four members were arrested in December.

Other spare parts were found in the workshop in an oil palm estate.

“We believe the gang sent stolen lorries to the workshop to be dismantled.

The parts are then sold,” he added.

 ??  ?? Crippling blow Thousands of vehicle engine parts and components cannibalis­ed from stolen lorries and cars at the godown raided by police in Simpang, Perak.
Crippling blow Thousands of vehicle engine parts and components cannibalis­ed from stolen lorries and cars at the godown raided by police in Simpang, Perak.

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