Locks, We do not need no stinking locks :-)

teamzr1

Supporting vendor
Car thefts have skyrocketed in St. Louis in recent months, with city leadership threatening lawsuits against Kia and Hyundai for an alleged defect that makes certain makes of the cars easier to steal.

“Our drivers probably get about five of these things a day. Just Kias and Hyundais getting stolen,” tow truck driver Mark Hartmann told KMOV last week of thefts in the city.

Auto thefts in St. Louis have doubled this year, according to KMOV.
In July alone, the city averaged about 21 Kia and Hyundai theft incidents each day.
That number increased to 23 thefts each day in August, the St. Louis Post-Dispatch previously reported.

In August, St. Louis leaders threatened to sue Hyundai and Kia, demanding the car companies address a defect that allegedly makes stealing vehicles made before 2021 easier to steal.
KMOV reported last week that plans to sue the carmakers over the city’s spike in auto thefts are still in the works.

“With this letter, the city demands that Kia and Hyundai mitigate the defective conditions providing thieves – including teenagers as young as 13 the instrumentalities by which they are destroying property, endangering city drivers and themselves, and, in some cases, committing violent felonies,” according to the letter written Aug. 19 by City Counselor Sheena Hamilton.
 

phild

CCCUK Member
From my own recent experience the police here in UK are not interested in auto theft, other crimes also it seems, they just hand out crime reference numbers like confetti. (n)
 
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