The Denver Post

Teens stealingmo­re cars; many learn fromsocial media

- By Timarango and Jacey Fortin

One of the busiest places in Memphis, Tenn., these days is the impound lot north of downtown, where tow- truck drivers can sit in line for more than six hours to make drop- offs, victims can wait weeks to get stolen vehicles back and some 2,700 cars are squeezed onto the grounds of an old farm- equipment factory.

The crowding is the result in part of an auto-theft boom that has gripped Memphis and other U. S. cities.

Vehicles from two manufactur­ers, Kia and Hyundai, have proved especially vulnerable to theft, prompting cities to file lawsuits against the carmakers and at least one state’s attorney general to open an investigat­ion.

Of the nearly 11,000 cars stolen inmemphis last year — about twice as many as in 2021 — about one-third were late-model Kias and Hyundais, according to police.

It doesn’t take much to rip them off: just a screwdrive­r, a USB cord and hotwiring know-how found in videos proliferat­ing on social media.

Many of the culprits are teenagers or young adults stealing cars for kicks or to use them for other crimes, such as robberies, police say

ore than half of the 175 people arrested and accused of car theft this year in Memphis were teenagers, who often abandon the vehicles after a joyride.

“We know that a lot of our young people are breaking into cars and stealing cars as almost a dare, or a trend, right now,” Cerelyn J. Davis, the Memphis police chief, told the City Council at a recent meeting.

“They are finding it easy to do.”

U. S. cities have faced a rise in car thefts during the pandemic.

Some other categories of crime, including homicides and aggravated assaults, rose nationally in 2020 and 2021 and declined somewhat last year, although they remain above prepandemi­c levels, according to data collected by the nonpartisa­n Council on Criminal Justice.

However, auto thef ts have continued to rise, even as other forms of lawbreakin­g have leveled out or fallen.

Early in the pandemic, experts who study crime say, more vehicles were stolen partly because people were staying home: Cars were left on streets during the day, rather than in secure parking lots near offices.

But the surge has continued, fueled in part by social media videos that show, step by step, how to steal Kias and Hyundais that are not equipped with an engine immobilize­r — an electronic security device that keeps a car frombeing started without a key.

“All you had to do was put something on Tiktok, how to steal these cars, and they started getting stolen left and right,” Sen. Chuck Schumer, a New York Democrat, said at a news conference last week in Buffalo, N.Y., where he brandished a USB cord while standing next to recent auto theft victims.

The two Korean car brands, part of the same conglomera­te, are increasing­ly popular in America, accounting for about onetenth of U. S. auto sales last year.

They recently issued statements saying they had fixed the problem that makes their vehicles relatively easy to steal in their latest models, and were introducin­g free software upgrades for vulnerable cars — about 4.5 million Kias and 3.8 million Hyundais, the federal government estimated.

At the same time, the companies have shipped steering wheel locks to police department­s across the country, to be provided free of charge to car owners who drive at-risk models

nd executives say they constantly are monitoring Tiktok and Youtube for new videos that show how to steal their vehicles and alerting the social media companies so those videos can be removed.

Kia said in a statement that it was “committed to supporting law enforcemen­t and owners in addressing these crimes.”

Representa­t ives for Youtube and Tiktok said the companies had removed several videos related to what is known as the “Kia Challenge” in recent months. Youtube said in a statement that it might allow some of the videos to remain if “they’re meant to be educationa­l, documentar­y, scientific or artistic.”

A Tiktok spokespers­on said the social network “does not condone this behavior, which violates our policies and will be removed if found on our platform.”

Officials say the socialmedi­a- driven rise in Kia and Hyundai thefts began about two years ago inmilwauke­e and spread nationwide.

City attorneys for Seattle and Columbus, Ohio, recently sued the automakers for not installing anti-theft technology, and other cities, including Cleveland, Milwaukee and St. Louis, have threatened litigation.

This week, Minnesota’s attorney general, Keith Ellison, said he was investigat­ing whether the companies had violated his state’s consumer protection and public nuisance laws.

“The drastic increase in Kia and Hyundai vehicle thefts is continuing to threaten public safety and do serious harm to our communitie­s,” he said in a statement.

The car-theft surge has been the most persistent and wide- ranging crime trend in America during the pandemic, affecting jurisdicti­ons large and small.

In the 30 major cities examined by the Council on Criminal Justice, motor vehicle thefts were up 21% last year from 2021 — resulting in an estimated 37,560 more stolen cars in those places.

This followed doubledigi­t increases in 2020 and 2021. (Carjacking­s, categorize­d as a violent crime and counted separately, also have risen in some cities.)

Richard Rosenfeld, a criminolog­ist at the University of Missouri and the lead author of the council’s report, said the social media phenomenon was only part of the problem.

“There is no definitive explanatio­n for this large and sustained increase in motor vehicle theft,” he said.

“It seems, in my view, to have taken on the characteri­stic of something like a contagion.”

Sometimes, officials say, the stolen cars are linked to other crimes, deadly crashes and even vigilantis­m, as car-theft victims take matters into their own hands after locating their vehicles with trackers.

In St. Louis last year, the drivers of two stolen cars — one a Hyundai, the other a Kia — were involved in a shootout at a busy intersecti­on near downtown, leaving a 17-year- old with a gunshot wound.

And a woman in St. Louis County was charged with murder after police said she tracked down her stolen Hyundai in late December and killed two men.

In Buffalo, four teenagers riding in a stolen Kia were killed in October when they crashed into a wall on an expressway and flew through the car’s glass roof.

And Ellison, the Minnesota attorney general, said that stolen Kias and Hyundais in Minneapoli­s were linked to five homicides, 13 shootings, 36 robberies and 265 vehicle accidents last year.

Columbus, which has sued both carmakers to recoup the costs in city resources devoted to dealing with the rise in thefts, is seeing an average of 17 Kias and Hyundais stolen each day, said Zach Klein, the city attorney.

“These are used cars that a lot of retail and middle- class workers drive,” he said, adding that there was “this cascading effect not only to law enforcemen­t that are dealing with it but also to the everyday citizens in our community that are the victims of these crimes and then don’t have an alternativ­e vehicle to get to work.”

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