The Automobile Club of Southern California, the Taskforce for Regional Autotheft Prevention (TRAP) and the National Insurance Crime Bureau (NICB) teamed today to expand car theft prevention with free vehicle window VIN etching at the Auto Club’s Whittier branch on East Whittier Boulevard for the second year.
TRAP is made up of law enforcement agencies, including the California Highway Patrol, the Los Angeles Sheriff’s Dept. and the NICB.
Window VIN etching consists of stenciling the unique federally-registered 17-digit VIN onto a vehicle’s windshields and windows. The process takes about 6-8 minutes per vehicle. The stencil lightly marks the top layers of glass but does not weaken the windows.
“Window VIN etching makes a vehicle less desirable to thieves because the process makes disassembly at a chop shop more difficult and the parts less able to be resold,” said the Auto Club’s Corporate Communications Manager Jeffrey Spring.
If thieves change the VIN plate number on the front dashboard of a vehicle, then they must change the etched windows that are stenciled with the unique vehicle number which costs money and cuts into their profit. Un-etched windows do not pose that problem.
Although auto theft is declining nationwide, it remains the number one property crime in America. California was the top state again for auto thefts in 2017, with the theft tally at 175,351, a rate of one vehicle stolen every three minutes and valued by the FBI as a $1.3 billion loss. Top stolen vehicles were late 1990s and early 2000s Honda Accord, Honda Civic, and Honda CR-V, according to state law enforcement statistics. The Whittier Police Dept. noted 313 stolen vehicles in 2017 in its jurisdiction.
“Although viewed as a property crime, most suspects arrested for vehicle theft are also involved in other criminal activities,” said a Los Angeles Sheriff’s Dept. (LASD) representative.
“Some vehicles are also targeted by car thieves to steal third-row seats in SUVs, airbags, in-car entertainment and factory navigation systems and paperwork to steal identities,” said the LASD representative.
“The Auto Club is pleased to work with TRAP and the NICB to help prevent auto thefts and to help motorists protect their vehicle investment,” said Spring. “For victims, having one’s car stolen, as well as its contents, is costly, upsetting and inconvenient.”
“Working together, law enforcement and organizations like the Auto Club are able to help educate our community members to better protect themselves from being victimized by car thieves,” said the National Insurance Crime Bureau’s Mark Lupoli.
In addition to window VIN etching, drivers received tips from the Auto Club, the LAPD-Hollenbeck Division and the NICB to help prevent their cars from being stolen.
For 2016, California’s Most Stolen Vehicles:
- Honda Civic
- Honda Accord
- Ford Pickup (Full Size)
- Chevrolet Pickup (Full Size)
- Toyota Camry
- Nissan Altima
- Toyota Corolla
- Dodge Pickup (Full Size)
- GMC Pickup (Full Size)
- Chevrolet Impala
Source: NICB – 2017 Hot Wheels Report
For 2017, Top Three California Theft Targets:
- 1998 Honda Civic
- 2000 Honda Civic
- 1997 Honda Accord
Source: CHP – 2017 California Vehicle Theft Facts