Scam Alert: Auto VIN Cloning
Vehicle Identification Number cloning is a growing problem. Here’s a piece from a Massachusetts TV station about it.
Here’s how it works:
Thieves know the vehicle identification number, VIN, is unique and different on every car. So first they copy VIN’s from the Internet, car dealerships, from cars in malls and junkyards. They make perfect duplicates of the VIN plates and paperwork. Finally they steal a similar car and replace its VIN with the copied one.
Presto: it’s cloned. The stolen car can no longer be identified as stolen; it has a new identity.
One man now working with police once cloned cars for a living. “All you need is a title and registration, and you can get the car back on the road in an hour,” stolen car expert Danny said.
Officers of the Massachusetts auto theft task force showed us envelopes that are essentially cloning kits, each full of fake VIN’s. Police said they seized the kits from a Fall River apartment where one suspect was staying.
“So each one of these is sort of an order for a stolen car?” Hank Phillippi Ryan asked. “Correct,” Trooper Wheaton said. “And these kits could mean the cloning is getting closer?” Ryan asked. “So people in Massachusetts could be victims?”
“They could potentially be buying, unknowingly buying, a stolen car,” Trooper Wheaton said.
When Shawna Martin’s mechanic found her car was actually a stolen automobile, she called the police. “I was making loan payments on a car I didn’t even have,” Lezniak said.
(The) problem is that the Massachusetts Registry of Motor Vehicles, like those in most states, isn’t equipped to share interstate info on duplicate VIN’s, and insurance experts showed us how easy it is to counterfeit a title.
“How many of these do you think are out there?” Ryan asked. “Oh I don’t know, hundreds? Tens of thousands,” Richard Murphy of the National Insurance Crime Bureau said.
To protect yourself at car buying time, police say make sure all the VIN’s on the car and the title are exact matches, and do a car history to check for anything suspicious.
Experts estimate 50,000 cloned cars are on the road right now, and they fear this new numbers game may make you the loser.
My immediate, unfortunate, risk-minimizing, and admittedly not-totally-informed reaction is that I won’t buy a used car from an individual, but will instead always go through a dealer, because my recourse against a dealer who unwittingly sells me a cloned vehicle should be greater. Of course, that’s scant consolation if the dealer goes under because he got duped too many times…..










In Atlanta, I was hit by an illegal Yellow Cab. I discovered a few weeks later that Yellow Cab cloned the VIN of the cab. True identity of the cab was stolen. My evidence eventually led police to yellow cab headquarters and impounded over 200 yellow cabs for bogus vins and registrations. How do I attack this as a victim and be made whole again. Please help!
Comment by michael — September 20, 2005 @ 3:45 pm
#1, so sorry to hear about the ugly incident.
If the “hit” is an auto accident and you had full-fledged car insurance, you would normally be made whole by your car insurance comapany under your policy’s uninsured motorists’ coverage.
If you were hurt while driving, there’s a chance medical payments coverage in your auto policy might kick in. If you on business for an employer at the time, workers’ comp might be relevant.
If you were hit as a pedestrian, the workers’ comp coverage is still a possibility if you were on employer business. You may have some cause of action to sue the cab company.
You really should consult a lawyer and talk with your insurance agent(s) and employer before taking action.
Comment by TBlumer — September 20, 2005 @ 3:53 pm