The News-Times

Car theft spikes in pandemic

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LOS ANGELES (AP) — The coronaviru­s hasn’t been kind to car owners.

With more people than ever staying home to lessen the spread of

COVID-19, their sedans, pickup trucks and SUVs are parked unattended on the streets, making them easy targets for opportunis­tic thieves.

Despite silent streets and nearly nonexisten­t traffic, vehicle larcenies shot up 63% in New York and nearly

17% in Los Angeles from Jan. 1 through mid-May, compared with the same period last year.

And many other law enforcemen­t agencies around the U.S. are reporting an increase in stolen cars and vehicle burglaries, even as violent crime has dropped dramatical­ly nationwide in the coronaviru­s pandemic. It’s a low-risk crime with a potentiall­y high reward, police say, especially when many drivers leave their doors unlocked or their keys inside.

“You might as well put a sticker on the window that says ‘come take my stuff,’ ” said an exasperate­d Alex Villanueva, the Los Angeles County sheriff.

In Austin, Texas, last month, a whopping 72% of the 322 stolen vehicles had their keys nearby. The total number of auto thefts in April spiked about 50%, and burglaries to vehicles were up 2% from April 2019.

The virus has created a “perfect storm,” said Austin police Sgt. Chris Vetrano, a supervisor in the 11-detective auto theft unit that investigat­es stolen vehicle cases.

The elements for that storm: Drivers are at home and not using or checking their cars regularly. School’s out, so teenagers are trying their luck. Criminals are out of work and have more time on their hands or need fast money to support a drug habit.

“You can get on the internet nowadays and learn how to break into vehicles just searching YouTube,” Vetrano said.

(He should know: Someone broke into his locked Ford F-150 pickup truck, one of the most commonly stolen vehicles, about a year ago.)

Salt Lake City police Detective Greg Wilking said a 22% spike in vehicle burglaries there could be from a few criminals working quickly on “car prowls.”

“It’s really 10 seconds,“he said. “They’re not spending a lot of time in your car. It’s a smash-and-graband-go,” sometimes in broad daylight.

Wilking worries the numbers will keep rising because “people get more desperate as time goes on.”

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