Grand Theft Auto

Had a wonderful wake up this morning with a call from my property manager, advising that thieves had attempted to steal my car.

Apparently a tenant called in 111 around 7am in the morning, finding my car with the lights on, engine running and door open.

Once the property manager figured out that it was my car, they called me, but after a 4am coding session, I didn’t end up waking up until around 10am.

After running down and checking it out, I made the decision to try and shutdown the car, considering that the police weren’t appearing any time soon and I didn’t want it to a) burn all my fuel and b) risk the engine overheating.

Unfortunately my car knowledge is about as good as most people’s computer knowledge – I get in, turn it on and drive, which meant I wasn’t totally sure on the correct step – I figured that removing that battery would do the trick, but wasn’t totally sure if that was the right move.

Ended up calling AA, who were pretty pathetic and told me that I can’t get any callout as “it’s a vandalism problem”, making me wonder why I even pay for them at all and offering no other assistance.

My insurance company AMI wasn’t too useful at first, saying if I needed help, they’d send a first-responder service out and charge me. A subsequent call had one of their staff confirming that disconnecting the battery would be the correct step to take.

Once disconnected, the car then stalled and thankfully stopped, although I made sure to drop it into neutral before turning off the engine (automatic).

Left running at the complex entrance, fortunately other cars could just get around it.

Ripped up dash :'(

Bye bye beautiful :-(

The weird thing about the theft, is that after going to the effort to start my car, they then stole nothing but some change and my laptop car charger, ignoring my decent car stereo and of course, the car itself.

After reviewing the camera footage, it turns out that they stole my car simply to have something to open the security gate with, whilst they drove out with a specific car that they were targetting.

I guess they really did decide my Starlet was too uncool to steal… sadly they didn’t think it was uncool enough to leave alone entirely, probably due to it’s simplicity and no alarm making it easy to steal.

Pretty rough job (but not uncommon apparently) as they butchered the drivers lock and then tore apart the dash and ripped off the light control column, leaving it in a right mess.

Took about 7 hours for police to come out, not really my greatest first impression with police involvement, but the officer & forensics person were both friendly and easy to deal with and I now have a case number with them and a case number with my insurance company to have to chase up with them on Monday.

Not sure at this stage whether it’s going to be a repair or a write off – the rest of the car is in excellent condition and it’s a great unit, but it’s only valued at $4k.

Thankfully I do have insurance… although I’m sure AMI don’t love me, seeing as I just moved my car to them only two days ago, and it’s really going to fuck my no claims bonus. :-(

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5 Responses to Grand Theft Auto

  1. Kyhwana says:

    Lame! Thought about sticking a GPS tracker in it? (And possibly a remote PA “You have 10 seconds to comply!”)

    • Jethro Carr says:

      Considering it, if I get it back I’ll have to get an immobilizer or alarm of some kind installed, to stop any attempted repeats.

      Long term, I have been considering hooking up an Android/Arduino combination to the car to control it’s functions better, so that would be an ideal platform to build a GPS tracker on.

  2. Kyhwana says:

    I assume it has ODB-II as well?
    You can get BT ODB-II dongles off deal extreme for cheap that work with android apps. (Just don’t leave it plugged in/”connected” all the time! drained my battery doing that)
    There’s an app called torque that will give you all the cool engine stats/MCU stuff too.
    (Like fuel economy, bunch of ratios, speed, RPM, etcetc)

    • Jethro Carr says:

      Pretty sure it has ODB-II, just need to take a better look to confirm.

      My thoughts at this stage were to use an Arduino based circuit to hook into the ODB-II which can handle all the conversion circuity and when the car is turned on, that Arduino could then boot an Android-based computer (maybe cellphone or maybe something else) which would provide more powerful functionality.

      That means the Arduino can use next to no power on idle and start electronics automatically when the car is used.

  3. Allen Han says:

    omg. That sucks. insurance ftw..

    P.S. what r u coding for at 4am?

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