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“Just how many vehicles on our roads have a stolen identity?” Despite a recorded downward trend in car crime, 66% reduction between 1995 and 2008, Wendy Rowe, Managing Director of Retainagroup has this year seen a significant rise in the number of calls to the International Security Register (ISR) from police, needing to check the details of a suspicious vehicle. Criminals reason that a vehicle they have stolen needs a new identity if they are going to sell it or use it for another crime and achieve this by changing its number plates, or in the case of professional cloning, the Vehicle Identity Number (VIN) as well, to those of a similar vehicle which has a perfectly legal owner or been ‘written off’.
Vehicles marked
and registered by Retainagroup have an unique code, the manufacturer’s logo and
the telephone number of the ISR permanently etched into their windows. The
police can check the etched code immediately any time of the day and establish
whether it matches the correct details held on the ISR. This successful vehicle
security marking and registration system, established over 20 years ago,
protects millions of vehicles against theft and significantly increases the rate
of recovery. Police across the country are given immediate help to clear up
crimes which would be impossible to identify without the Retainagroup System and
the ISR.
During the last
month, amongst a long list of successes, ISR operators detected: a Toyota Land
Cruiser with incorrect VIN and registration plate that had been in a Met Police
pound for three months; a Land Rover Discovery on false plates in Suffolk; a
cloned Lexus IS200 in Essex and a Toyota Avensis abandoned without plates in an
overnight car park in Mid Yorkshire. Another perfect illustration of how the
system detects cloning was the seizure of four vehicles by the ports authority
in Dubai just prior to release to a local agent representing the importer. The
vehicles had been professionally cloned and did not appear on the Interpol
stolen vehicle database. Police checked the etched codes with the ISR and 3 of
the vehicles were identified as having been stolen. The fourth vehicle had not
been marked and registered on the ISR.
Wendy Rowe hopes
that insurers will help to defeat the rise in identity theft, by rewarding
vehicle manufacturers with a worthwhile benefit for protecting their vehicles
against it. She said those companies already marking and registering new
vehicles sold in the UK (Alfa Romeo, Daihatsu, Fiat, Iveco, Kia, Mazda, Proton,
Saab, Subaru, Suzuki and SsangYong) are demonstrating a real concern for their
customers and for police involved in fighting professional criminals.
Retainagroup Ltd Website
Posted by
Kristina Tasic
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30 November 2009
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