Often, thefts from cars occur in waves. There may be one actor or one small group of actors who target a large number of automobiles. In some cases, thieves will target vulnerable personal items such as laptop computers, GPS units, portable music players, pocketbooks, wallets, or even loose change. In other cases, a particular car part or accessory such as stereo equipment or air bags is targeted. Many jurisdictions find automobiles stripped of high-intensity xenon headlights. Trends show that older cars are hit for personal items because they lack security systems; newer cars are hit for their high-value components.
Narrowing the Suspect Pool
It is important for handling officers to note whether personal items or car components are being stolen. For example, if an agency determines newer cars are being hit for high-end parts and these parts are being fenced, it may be time to step up the enforcement of pawn shop tracking laws (most states require pawn shops to maintain a record of who is delivering items). If the pawn shops stop paying for the items, the thieves will stop stealing them. If a particular vehicle model is being targeted, the police can set up a sting operation using a bait car.
Identifying the trends is very important in stopping these mini crime waves. This may be accomplished by designating one officer to handle all the thefts from autos calls. This will, at least informally, have one astute officer looking for commonalities in the thefts, particularly as he has vested interest in stopping them.
This officer will look at the area in which the cars are hit. Are the thefts occurring in residential neighborhoods? On the street or from driveways? In malls? On dead-end or one-way streets? What areas do the perpetrators seem to avoid? Are the cars equipped with alarms? Is entry gained through unlocked doors or is forced entry used? Does the actor seem to have a master key? Are the articles taken for personal use (CDs, loose change) or for professional resale?