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Embedded Citizen
Joined: 10 Jun 2008 Posts: 5
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Posted: Wed Aug 06, 2008 12:23 pm Post subject: Catalytic Converter Thieves Caught (Washington Cty, MD) |
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From the NBC25 Website:
WASHINGTON COUNTY, MD - A Maryland State Police trooper says he caught two men stealing catalytic converters from cars parked at a rest area near Hagerstown.
Jeffrey Bowers (pictured left) and Brian Virts (pictured below) were arrested Tuesday at the park-and-ride on Interstate 70 near Downsville Pike.
The trooper says he caught both men with a battery-operated saw, and a nearby vehicle was missing its exhaust system.
Troopers have been checking parking areas more frequently since catalytic converters are a hot item for thieves right now. _________________ ==================
Illegitimi non carborundum! |
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cookieclaygirl

Joined: 03 Dec 2007 Posts: 2136 Location: shippensburg
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Posted: Wed Aug 06, 2008 6:36 pm Post subject: |
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interesting....
i've been reading about those thefts and wondering about them.... |
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.45chel

Joined: 26 Oct 2007 Posts: 3043 Location: Chambersburg
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Posted: Wed Aug 06, 2008 11:04 pm Post subject: |
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I'm willing to bet it's more than two guys, but certainly not implying it's an organized ring. _________________ Nevermind. |
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Coppy

Joined: 28 Oct 2007 Posts: 2569 Location: Chambersburg
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Posted: Thu Aug 07, 2008 8:43 am Post subject: |
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| What's the point of this? Are catalytic converters really worth the trouble? |
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Andy G
Joined: 06 Aug 2008 Posts: 9 Location: 34 N. Main St Chambersburg,Pa 17201
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Posted: Thu Aug 07, 2008 10:52 am Post subject: |
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Sounds like another niche market. Considering the price for a new one, I'm sure that those less than above the board kind of shops and back yard mechanics can make it mighty tempting to deal with the I don't care where it came from parts supplier.  |
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Coppy

Joined: 28 Oct 2007 Posts: 2569 Location: Chambersburg
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Posted: Thu Aug 07, 2008 10:55 am Post subject: |
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| I'd like catalytic converter theft to be referred to from now on as "Redneck Robbery." |
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thebrokenvessel

Joined: 20 Aug 2008 Posts: 4 Location: Chambersburg
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Posted: Wed Aug 20, 2008 10:39 am Post subject: Converter! |
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| I'm a woman and have no idea what this type of converter does so if someone could tell me I'd appreciate it. I'm trying to find out why this item is so popular for thieves suddenly... |
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Coppy

Joined: 28 Oct 2007 Posts: 2569 Location: Chambersburg
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Posted: Wed Aug 20, 2008 2:21 pm Post subject: |
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Great question!
Here's an overview:
| Wikipedia wrote: | | A catalytic converter (colloquially, "cat" or "catcon") is a device used to reduce the toxicity of emissions from an internal combustion engine. First widely introduced on series-production automobiles in the US market for the 1975 model year to comply with tightening EPA regulations on auto exhaust, catalytic converters are still most commonly used in motor vehicle exhaust systems. Catalytic converters are also used on generator sets, forklifts, mining equipment, trucks, buses, trains, and other engine-equipped machines. A catalytic converter provides an environment for a chemical reaction wherein toxic combustion by-products are converted to less-toxic substances. |
Here's is an article from How Stuff Works detailing the function of the catalytic converter.
And another article on catalytic converter theft (and why):
| MSNBC wrote: | As prices of precious metals skyrocket, thieves are targeting an obscure component of automotive exhaust systems in lightning thefts that can be accomplished in less than a minute, police and automotive experts say.
The component is the catalytic converter, which has been a mandatory part of exhaust systems since 1975. Police across the country say they have seen a dramatic rise in thefts of the components in recent months.
If you peer inside a used catalytic converter, nothing looks salvageable, much less valuable. But some of the gray gunk in there hides three expensive precious metals.
Catalytic converters have only small traces of the metals — platinum, palladium and rhodium — but there’s enough in them for a thief to resell stolen units for up to $200 apiece. Rhodium is among the most expensive metals on Earth, commanding as much as $6,000 an ounce on the open market.
Scrap dealers “are paying top dollar — platinum, palladium, rhodium inside of them — and they’re getting top dollar” on resale, said Jack Bell of North Shore Towing, which tows vehicles for the Evanston, Ill., police.
“The word spreads real quick about it, what they’re worth,” said Marty Antonelli of Marty’s Welding and Muffler Shop in Pittsburgh. “Everybody is on them now.”
The converters are inviting targets because they’re easy to grab. Mounted on the exterior undercarriage of vehicles, they can be removed in about a minute with any standard metal cutting tool. An enterprising thief in a crowded parking lot or garage can make off with enough converters to clear $2,000 or $3,000 in half an hour.
“These thieves are targeting shopping malls, school parking lots, busy business districts, and they are hitting these places in the daylight,” said Jennifer Krings, a spokeswoman for AAA. “A lot of the large passenger cars — SUVs, trucks and vans — have two, so those are a target.”
The 4Runner is the most common target of thieves, said the Los Angeles Police Department, which issued a public warning about what it called a “new disturbing trend.” The 4Runner sits high off the ground, and its converter is attached with four bolts that are easily sawed off, making it simple for thieves to duck underneath, do their business and scoot.
The Kia Sportage, with a similar profile, is also popular, said Ron Baker, general manager of Spitzer Motors in Cleveland.
“They’re the easiest to get under and the easiest to remove,” Baker said.
But any vehicle made after 1975 is a potential target, said Kyle Evans, a spokesman for the Murfreesboro, Tenn., police.
“This is certainly something that could happen in someone’s driveway,” Evans said.
More commonly, it happens in parking lots and garages, where dozens of vehicles are lined up ripe for the plucking.
“I’ve heard of people going into apartment complexes in the middle of the night — just taking a handsaw, getting up under someone’s car and sawing it off,” said Tony Murtell, manager of U-Pull & Pay in Philadelphia. “They collect a few of them and take off somewhere to be recycled.”
“It’s happening everywhere now, you know,” said Trina Stutt, part-owner of Stutt’s Transmission Service in Pulaski, Tenn. “I am shocked at how fast this is growing.”
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| Quote: | The Institute of Scrap Recycling Industries, a national trade association, said there were no national statistics on the pilferage of catalytic converters, which are generally lumped in with other auto-theft incidents. But it said it had seen a sharp rise in reports of thefts, and it urged scrap dealers to be suspicious of anyone walking in with a converter.
As it happens, there’s not much a recycler can do. Catalytic converters don’t have serial numbers, so they can’t be tracked, making a stolen converter all but impossible for a scrap dealer to identify.
“It’s very hard to trace that,” said Sgt. Chuck Zeissler of the Madison County, Ala., Sheriff’s Office. “You would have to go back and see what type of actual catalytic converter was placed on that vehicle and try and trace it back to the vehicle it was stolen off of.”
While police say drug addicts are most frequently found responsible for the thefts, the treasure in the exhaust system is rich enough that it can lure some surprising culprits.
In December, a former member of the Board of Aldermen in Arlington, Tenn., was arrested after Shelby County sheriff’s deputies found him tucked under a Buick station wagon. The man, co-owner of an auto parts store in town, was trying to steal catalytic converters from vehicles in the Tennessee Highway Patrol’s own impound lot, deputies said.
If catalytic converters are so valuable that people will actually try to steal them from the cops, what does that mean for everyday car owners?
“Unless you can garage your vehicle 24 hours a day, anyone can climb under your car and cut off the catalytic converter,” said Sgt. Bob Jagoe of the Baltimore County, Md., police auto theft team.
Harrisburg, Pa., police Chief Charles Kellar acknowledged: “There is not a lot you can do. You have to go to sleep eventually.” |
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