How's This for Dumb? Leaving Your Keys in the Car.
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Jim Motavalli
May 5, 2015 (Archives)
2 Comments
anti-theft
Car theft would practically disappear if we just locked our cars. And yes, this is a posed photo. How could you tell? (Jason Zollan/Flickr)
It’s getting harder and harder to steal cars, thanks to button starts, hard-to-defeat security systems and electronic keys. But unfortunately, a few dope-slap-deserving among us are making it easy for the bad guys by…leaving their keys in the car.
Yep, that's right. Absent-minded professors and moms across the nation are leaving the keys to the Accord behind. You shouldn’t need National Insurance Crime Bureau (NCIB) President Joe Wehrle to remind you, “Leaving the keys in the vehicle is an open invitation for the opportunistic car thief.”
There was a "really crappy old CD player" where that hole is, Erica says. Apparently, not quite THAT crappy. (Erica/Flickr)
NCIB’s statistics, based on FBI reports, show that just 5.4 percent of the U.S. cars and trucks stolen in 2012 were served up with the keys, but the number jumped to six percent in 2013 and 6.7 percent in 2014. To put that in perspective, the 2014 number represents 44,828 car thefts…with keys!
The actual number of keys-in-car theft is almost certainly higher, since the official numbers reflect only cases where the owner admitted doing it, or the keys were recovered along with the car.
Put another way, if everyone pocketed their keys, car thefts would have totaled 614,889 in 2014, instead of the actual number—659,717. If we actually had only 614,000 thefts, it would be the lowest number since 1966. Car theft is falling rapidly, for the reasons I cited above, but why are we giving the less-savvy criminals a helping hand?
I asked Frank G. Scafidi, an NCIB spokesman, what he’d say to people who leave their keys behind. “I’d say wear comfortable shoes since they may be walking home from wherever they parked their car last,” he said.
A state with a lot of cars tends to have a lot of thefts. Makes sense to us. (Numbers are not per capita) (NCIB graphic)
Makes sense. Why help thieves win the day? Are the keys so heavy drivers don’t want to lug them around? The irony here is that car theft is actually way down since a record high in 1991. NCIB says the chances of having your car stolen is now lower than at any time since 1960. And newer cars are the most secure. Even with new technology, preventing a theft relies on the simple act of taking the key with you. Says Scafidi:
Keys may yield to fobs or some other piece of technology in time, but if there is a device that needs to be in or near the car for it to start—and people leave it in the car—then the result is the same. It may occur less when traditional keys are as rare as hand-crank ignitions, but that’s a long way off.
While we’re at it, what’s with those among us who leave expensive cameras, laptops and tablets in their cars? The police reports are full of the theft of that kind of high-tech stuff. Thieves now have hand-held devices that can detect Bluetooth signals, so even if you put the electronics in the glove compartment they’re detectable by a tech-savvy thief. It’s not an urban myth: cheap signal detectors are out there, and they’re really helpful in finding expensive devices.
Top metro areas for theft include Vegas, Detroit, Atlanta and Philly. (NCIB graphic)
And then there’s the holiday thing. Christmas Day is the safest (1,224 thefts), and New Year’s Day the most dangerous (2,184 thefts), according to 2014 statistics. Other holidays to watch out for: Halloween, Memorial Day and Labor Day. So if any more warning is necessary, here's some video about why you should never, ever leave your keys in the car:
- See more at: http://admin-www.cartalk.com/blogs/jim-motavalli/hows-dumb-leaving-your-keys-car#sthash.487FrH5T.dpuf
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Mustangman• 16 days ago
Considering I watched a man get his car stolen while he left it idling at a suburban gas station/convenience store because he was too lazy to turn it off and take his keys, I'm not surprised by this article. If you WANT a new car, leave the keys in, otherwise, take them.
Add 1 more, don't leave your car unlocked in the driveway with your garage remote in the car and your pass-through door also unlocked. Thieves will just open the garage and walk right in.
To all this I simply say, DUH!!
Mr. Chompers• 16 days ago
Around here it's not surprising to see people leave their cars running when they go into a store. Granted, these are typically not the nicest-looking cars, and half the time there's a dog in the car. This is in suburban Atlanta, and crime is not unheard of...I guess some people just like to live on the edge
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The Principle of Least Interest: He who cares least about a relationship, controls it.
I left the keys in our car - ONCE! And I had locked the car!
The bad: On vacation - in an unfamiliar town - before cell phones.
The good: The front end manager at the supermarket where I had been shopping called AAA for me - then called the (only) tow company in town and alerted them they would be getting a all from AAA! 15 minutes later, I was back in my car. LOVE small town courtesies.
I leave my keys in the car all the time, and lock the car. I have a keypad on the door. I HIDE the keys, but they are in there when I am just running in somewhere like the kids' schools.
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LawyerLady
I can explain it to you, but I can't understand it for you.
I can't lock my door if my fob isn't on me, if I leave it in the car, the car knows it and won't let me lock it. (I lock the car by tapping the top of the door handle)
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Sometimes you're the windshield, and sometimes you're the bug.
I can't lock my door if my fob isn't on me, if I leave it in the car, the car knows it and won't let me lock it. (I lock the car by tapping the top of the door handle)
Sometimes I will leave the keys and take the remote.
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A flock of flirting flamingos is pure, passionate, pink pandemonium-a frenetic flamingle-mangle-a discordant discotheque of delirious dancing, flamboyant feathers, and flamingo lingo.
When we go out of town, we take the extra ones. The key can stay in the car. That way any of us needs to use the car, emergency or whatever, nobody is looking for keys.
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A flock of flirting flamingos is pure, passionate, pink pandemonium-a frenetic flamingle-mangle-a discordant discotheque of delirious dancing, flamboyant feathers, and flamingo lingo.
Ok, this winter, I was backing my car up into the street. Then I got out to try to unstick my car from the snow and realized I had locked my keys in the car. AND, to boot, the car was across the road in front of the kindergarten blocking all the traffic. And, on top of that, I had a meeting that I had to get too in 15 min!!!!
My key remote broke and I don't feel like paying upwards of 300 dollars to replace it. I don't leave my keys in the car ever, unless it's on accident and I've locked myself out, but that hasn't happened in years.
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