Posted on 08/28/2019 6:25:50 AM PDT by Red Badger
Anyone whos lived in California will advise you to never leave anything of value out and visible inside a parked car. Thats just an open invitation for a car thief to break in. But now it seems thieves are going beyond ransacking a cars interior: A San Francisco woman returned to her Toyota Prius only to find the car disassembled and its main battery pack stolen.
Multiple reports say that Marjory Kaplan parked her 2017 Prius just down the block from her apartment in Pacific Heights. Upon returning to her vehicle, she found that someone had stolen the Prius mid-mounted central battery pack, the one that supplies power to the hybrid-electric system, and not the auxiliary functions under the hood.
"You know, you go looking for your car and you know what you car looks like. It didn't look like my car. It looked like a jalopy car. It looked different. It looked disheveled," Kaplan explained to ABC7 News. "They took the seat out, cut all the wires and removed the battery, which I understand weighs 180 pounds.
Hi from Pacific Heights where a woman came out to find her PRIUS had been disassembled and car BATTERY stolen. (As a fellow Prius owner I didnt even know this could happen!) @abc7newsbayarea pic.twitter.com/l6DBO1gKcF Liz Kreutz (@ABCLiz) August 25, 2019
Battery pack thefts have been on the rise since ABC7 News first reported on the increase back in 2015. The packs are resold on the black market, which harks back to the days when clever thieves stole catalytic converters off new vehicles to extract the expensive precious metals found inside.
But what's different about this theft is that no windows or doors were forcefully damaged during the break-in. Rather, a small rear window was tactfully removed to gain access. This is a clear indication that the battery thieves are professional and know what theyre doing.
Its very organized, yeah, its very organized, Jeff Garcia, a Toyota mechanic, told KRON4. Garcia said his shop is in the middle of repairing four other Prius cars whose batteries were stolen in a similar manner. Its not just the battery theyre stealing, theyre damaging all the harnesses and everything else around there. Seatbelts are being cut.
"Had I been lucky enough just to have the window broken and the change taken," Kaplan continued. "I would have been very happy."
As a result of the battery theft, shes reportedly facing a $5,000 to $10,000 repair bill.
A street-view security camera was nearby, but unfortunately it was pointed the wrong way, so Kaplan doesn't expect much to happen. She also plans to sell her car after the repair and to depend more on public transportation.
There was an item some years back where a woman had to take a urine sample to the doc. She washed out and old whiskey bottle and used that. On the way to the doc, she stopped off to do some shopping. When she came back, her window was broken and the bottle gone. She was still laughing.
Garages have a special kit of bolts for the Prius battery that cannot be unscrewed replacing the existing bolts...like the special wheel lug nuts with a key.
It only protects you until the thieves get a socket wrench that fits the special bolts.
I am curios as to why they don’t steal the whole car and part it our the old fashion way?
I thought the glitter bomb was an AWESOME idea, especially with the fart(?) spray, but only an engineer would enjoy putting in the time and effort. I enjoy the simple but effective. Open the Amazon box on the bottom, load it, plain brown tape to secure it, and REPLACE THE ADDRESS LABEL with a fake. We'd probably need to reuse some of the Amazon airbags to keep the valuable merchandise from shifting around in the box, maybe nest a smaller box inside.
I have to stop this, or I'll be hitting up all the cat people I know for contributions, and end up putting it together this weekend.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.