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Legalize the Constitution
Picture of TMats
posted
Our next door neighbor just sent us a text and a picture. He was down in the Denver metro area last night. Someone broke out the side window of his nearly new truck. Popped the hood, and then stole it. Right, the hood!

There were several things inside the truck that could’ve been stolen, but I guess they were in a hurry.


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despite them
 
Posts: 13756 | Location: Wyoming | Registered: January 10, 2008Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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That's like the tailgate thefts that were so common.....

I lock the tailgate and try to keep the tailgate up near a barrier or wall if possible.

Big insurance money in that racket.

Andrew



Duty is the sublimest word in the English Language - Gen Robert E Lee.
 
Posts: 869 | Registered: May 01, 2010Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Shit don't
mean shit
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Scum bags. Probably to replace their hail damaged hood.
 
Posts: 5835 | Location: 7400 feet in Conifer CO | Registered: November 14, 2006Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Legalize the Constitution
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quote:
Originally posted by 1967Goat:
Scum bags. Probably to replace their hail damaged hood.

I’ll bet you’re right


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Posts: 13756 | Location: Wyoming | Registered: January 10, 2008Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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Years ago I lost to a thief my hood, radiator and headlight door off my 87 Omni (i know high end). Car was sitting right in my driveway while I was working afternoons. If I could have pulled in the drive and caught em in the act, I probably would have ran em over at least once.
We were in the middle of a kitchen remodel and I didn't need that shit. Can't you take yourself to the boneyard after an accident?


"The days are stacked against what we think we are." Jim Harrison
 
Posts: 1134 | Location: Ann Arbor | Registered: September 07, 2011Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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My friend parked her Honda at an Oakland BART station a few years back, and returned to find everything from the firewall forward missing.
 
Posts: 17317 | Location: Lexington, KY | Registered: October 15, 2006Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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Many years ago, a friend of mine went on a trip to Vegas and left his mid 80's Suburban at a business owned by the guy that he was traveling with. This was a manufacturing company with a huge outdoor storage area for storing their inventory before shipping. Area was completely surrounded by 8-10 foot chain link with barbed wire on top. When my friend returned from Vegas, lo and behold, all four doors and the two cargo doors on the Suburban were gone and there was no sign of fence damage. So either an inside job (not likely as the owners family was always around) or the crooks got the parts over the fence at night. Took my buddy about two months to get his truck back. Insurance had to go to junk yards to locate complete doors have it all painted and matching interior parts ordered and received. The thing you don't think about in this situation is that if you try to order a "door" from GM, it isn't a single part, it consists of hundreds of parts and inevitably, something is going to be back ordered and you have to wait on it. The dealer in this case said, we'll go to junk yards to get complete doors or it will be six months before its fixed.

I hate thieves!




Place your clothes and weapons where you can find them in the dark.

“If in winning a race, you lose the respect of your fellow competitors, then you have won nothing” - Paul Elvstrom "The Great Dane" 1928 - 2016
 
Posts: 3809 | Location: Wichita, Kansas | Registered: March 27, 2011Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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posted July 18, 2018 11:24 AM Hide Post
Scum bags. Probably to replace their hail damaged hood.


It could also be special order. Professionals can strip parts of a car pretty easily. The average Joe is not so fast. Original OEM hoods are not cheap.
 
Posts: 17697 | Location: Stuck at home | Registered: January 02, 2015Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Just for the
hell of it
Picture of comet24
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Someone needed a hood.


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Because in the end, you won’t remember the time you spent working in the office or mowing your lawn. Climb that goddamn mountain. Jack Kerouac
 
Posts: 16483 | Registered: March 27, 2004Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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When I was a kid living outside of Denver circa 1976, someone was building their own VW Beetle. They got our windshield one night during the winter.

They eventually got caught with most of a frankenbeetle.


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It seems to me that any law that is not enforced and can't be enforced weakens all other laws.
 
Posts: 4359 | Location: Tampa | Registered: August 19, 2007Reply With QuoteReport This Post
"The deals you miss don’t hurt you”-B.D. Raney Sr.
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My boss’s ‘12 F250 was stolen, stripped, and left on a county road.
On fire.

Apparently the F series tailgates with the built in cameras are a high theft item.

As I understand it, there are crews along the TX/Mex border that, if asked for a left side door for a ‘76 El Dorado, will ask back “What color?”
 
Posts: 6355 | Location: East Texas | Registered: February 20, 2008Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Legalize the Constitution
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Talked to my neighbor, and saw his truck this evening. The theft occurred in an area of Aurora that has a high vehicle theft rate. His teuck is a black, 3/4 diesel with the domed, louvered hood. He said the hood will fit a few model years and the look of it is desirable, so it may not have been simply that somebody’s truck was hail damaged—the hood has high value as an appearance upgrade alone.


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Posts: 13756 | Location: Wyoming | Registered: January 10, 2008Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Wild in Wyoming
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My 1969 Plymouth Roadrunner story:
Many, many years ago, while I was working nights and going to school daytime, I was living in an apartment building. I went out about 11:00 pm to go to work. Gas pedal was on the floor. Looked under hood. No carb. Just the 4 bolts were sitting there and the gasoline line was crimped.

PC
 
Posts: 1390 | Location: NW Wyoming | Registered: November 23, 2014Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Page late and a dollar short
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About 1969 I knew of a guy that got in his car to go to work, a 1955 Chevy. As he was pushing in the clutch, it felt funny at about the same time he was grabbing for the four speed floor shifter that was not there. Yep, somebody stole his transmission that night. If you are not familiar with tri-five Chevys they had a four point engine mounting that did not use the transmission for a powertrain mounting point, so four bolts on the transmission case to bellhousing, two u-bolts holding the driveshaft to the rear axle, unscrew the speedometer cable and you have a Muncie four speed.

At a dealership I worked at in the mid 70's a new at the time Monte Carlo was towed in. Well, kind of a Monte Carlo if you consider what was there as a recovery. These guys were good, even the headliner and quarter glasses were gone. Literally a set of frame rails with a completely empty body shell attached.

Seen a lot of thefts over the years while working in car dealerships, tire and wheel thefts from the storage lots was a ho-hum.......radios, everyday occurrence too. One dealership I worked at out west was alongside Interstate 25. We got hit for multiple tailgates one night in the early 80's. That was an inside job though, a fired porter and a couple of his buddies came to supplement his unemployment benefits.......


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————————--Ignorance is a powerful tool if applied at the right time, even, usually, surpassing knowledge(E.J.Potter, A.K.A. The Michigan Madman)
 
Posts: 8499 | Location: Livingston County Michigan USA | Registered: August 11, 2002Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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