
 
        
         
		Tips from the community brought police to an auto shop in the Bronx. 
 BY DEAN MOSES 
 An  NYPD  task  force  
 busted  up  an  allegedly  prolifi  
 c car theft ring in the  
 Bronx and Manhattan early  
 Tuesday  morning,  arresting  
 nine participants and seizing  
 12  stolen  vehicles  in  the  culmination  
 of a two-year investigation. 
 At dawn on Sept. 21, am- 
 NewYork Metro rode along  
 with  NYPD  offi cers  as  they  
 executed the fi nal  step  of  a  
 two-year  plan  of  action.  Detectives  
 from  the  task  force  
 spread out over the Bronx,  
 targeting  both  the  individuals  
 who run the illegal operation  
 and the businesses  
 that—sometimes  unknowingly— 
 store the poached  
 cars. 
 Auto  thefts  have  been  up  
 across the city so far in 2021;  
 though  the  NYPD  reported  
 a fi ve  percent  drop  in  grand  
 larceny auto in August, such  
 thefts are up 17% year-to-date  
 — making operations such as  
 the Sept. 21 raid key to the department’s  
 efforts  to  combat  
 these crimes. 
 While most syndicates  
 function as a hierarchy to  
 steal vehicles and parts for  
 re-sale,  cops  said,  this  “steal  
 crew” gathered the  loot  from  
 their thievery for themselves. 
 At a pre-dawn meeting  
 Tuesday immediately before  
 the raid, commanding offi cer  
 of the Auto Crime Unit, Deputy  
 Inspector Robert LaPollo  
 briefed offi cers  from  several  
 different departments who  
 joined together to take down  
 the car theft ring — including  
 the NYPD’s Warrant Section,  
 Attorney General’s offi ce personnel, 
  Department  of Motor  
 Vehicles,  Yonkers  Police  Department, 
  Emergency Services  
 Personnel, and Homeland  
 Security Investigations. 
 The team secured four  
 warrants  through  the  extensive  
 BRONX TIMES REPORTER,8     SEPT. 24-30, 2021 BTR 
 investigation,  which  
 involved the use of surveillance  
 videos, covert cameras  
 and License Plate Recognition  
 (LPR) technology that allowed  
 police to track and observe  
 individuals bringing in  
 stolen  vehicles.  In  addition,  
 police were able to obtain title  
 nine  wiretaps  which  helped  
 further the investigation. 
 The  criminals’  master  
 key 
 According to police  
 sources,  this  criminal  group  
 adopted a new technology  
 that  allows  them  to  digitally  
 clone car key fobs in order to  
 gain  access  to  vehicles  without  
 damaging them. 
 Utilizing a specifi c  discount  
 website, cops said, they  
 were able to obtain a key code,  
 which  they  then  gave  to  a  
 locksmith who would create a  
 key fob for them. Once inside  
 the  car,  they  used  an  aftermarket  
 After a two-year investigation, police take down an auto crime ring on  
 Sept. 21, 2021, in the Bronx.   Photos courtesy Dean Moses 
 auto  reprogramming  
 device  (a  scan  tool  used  by  
 locksmiths and mechanics)  
 that diagnoses error codes  
 and reprograms the car’s ignition. 
 Hacking the car’s system,  
 they made  the  vehicle’s  com- 
 EXCLUSIVE: NYPD slams  
 brakes on big Bronx auto theft  
 ring in early-morning raid