Brand new 2019 SCrew stolen within 24 hours of picking it up

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FrodoTBaggins88

FrodoTBaggins88

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I know which one I'd sell!

Yeah it just depends on the extent of the damage but obviously I'd prefer to keep the non-stolen one.

No way I would want a stolen vehicle back unless it had sentimental value. But good to hear...I guess.

Yeah would have preferred they did not find or at least found it a little later on, having to deal with selling it and all is huge pain in the ass. Apparently insurance does cover "loss of value/depreciation" also. So who knows. When your stuff gets stolen it sucks and you really do get screwed whether you have insurance or not, you're going to lose money somewhere.
 
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jaz13

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Best way to prove the loss of value to the insurance company would be to sell it.

Given the number of posts asking what the group thinks of a particular salvage or lemon Raptor, there is definitely a segment of people willing to spend big bucks on a truck despite its history.

A tangential story, an old GF's dad had his dirtbike stolen out of his garage. Police called him a few months later and told him they recovered his bike. Turned out a guy was using it to rob banks. He was actually pretty excited to own a bike with such a colorful history.
 
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FrodoTBaggins88

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Best way to prove the loss of value to the insurance company would be to sell it.

Given the number of posts asking what the group thinks of a particular salvage or lemon Raptor, there is definitely a segment of people willing to spend big bucks on a truck despite its history.

A tangential story, an old GF's dad had his dirtbike stolen out of his garage. Police called him a few months later and told him they recovered his bike. Turned out a guy was using it to rob banks. He was actually pretty excited to own a bike with such a colorful history.

Haha, that's a good one. Maybe if like El Chapo died in a last stand with the federales in it, sure I might hang on to it. I still might hang on to it either way, I will know once I see it how it was treated. I've gotten pretty good at identifying that stuff over years of buying and selling vehicles. I'm not ruling out keeping the stolen one and selling the new one. It doesn't affect the title at all since it is not a total loss. It would probably show up on like a vehicle history report and an educated buyer would probably take issue with that.
 

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I've lived near San Antonio for almost 10 years, we bought a house a few miles outside city limits after I retired from the military. My wife is a cancer survivor and San Antonio has outstanding military hospitals. They're still building homes in my area and new communities are being planned and built every year. During daylight everything looks nice and safe and comfortable. But at night the rats come out.

Property crime is ridiculous. Every single week SpotCrime shows vehicle thefts and burglaries all around us. My security cameras show thieves prowling the area almost every night between midnight and 3am-4am. My next door neighbor's F-350 was stolen out of his driveway using a tow truck. Across the street, F-250 with a screwdriver. Neighbors wake up to trucks on blocks with no wheels. Mid-day home burglaries happen, occasionally with residents home.

Part of the problem is our proximity to Mexico. But another is unfortunately that the theft trade and illegal immigration are an accepted culture of the city. There's a thriving market fencing stolen property. Flea markets, permanent yard sales, etc. Even in my new neighborhood there are "coyote" houses on every street with 5-6 vehicles in front and probably a dozen rotating residents. They announce "warrant roundups" on the news and my street has been blocked off at least 3 times by the Sheriff department to surround various houses and serve arrest warrants. Anyone you meet here is 50/50 on legal status.

Retiring as a San Antonio resident has been a culture shock for us. I'm not from Texas and was active duty military for almost 30 years. I was accustomed to a disciplined law-abiding culture and a suburban lifestyle. We've lived all over the world and in much of the United States, we've seen some things. San Antonio is striking it its lawlessness, we even have dozens of law enforcement officers arrested every year.
 
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FrodoTBaggins88

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I've lived near San Antonio for almost 10 years, we bought a house a few miles outside city limits after I retired from the military. My wife is a cancer survivor and San Antonio has outstanding military hospitals. They're still building homes in my area and new communities are being planned and built every year. During daylight everything looks nice and safe and comfortable. But at night the rats come out.

Property crime is ridiculous. Every single week SpotCrime shows vehicle thefts and burglaries all around us. My security cameras show thieves prowling the area almost every night between midnight and 3am-4am. My next door neighbor's F-350 was stolen out of his driveway using a tow truck. Across the street, F-250 with a screwdriver. Neighbors wake up to trucks on blocks with no wheels. Mid-day home burglaries happen, occasionally with residents home.

Part of the problem is our proximity to Mexico. But another is unfortunately that the theft trade and illegal immigration are an accepted culture of the city. There's a thriving market fencing stolen property. Flea markets, permanent yard sales, etc. Even in my new neighborhood there are "coyote" houses on every street with 5-6 vehicles in front and probably a dozen rotating residents. They announce "warrant roundups" on the news and my street has been blocked off at least 3 times by the Sheriff department to surround various houses and serve arrest warrants. Anyone you meet here is 50/50 on legal status.

Retiring as a San Antonio resident has been a culture shock for us. I'm not from Texas and was active duty military for almost 30 years. I was accustomed to a disciplined law-abiding culture and a suburban lifestyle. We've lived all over the world and in much of the United States, we've seen some things. San Antonio is striking it its lawlessness, we even have dozens of law enforcement officers arrested every year.

Yep that basically sums up my assessment of that area. 8 years military/gov myself and have been around a bit, probably not nearly as much as you have but enough to be surprised by the stuff that goes on inside our borders when everyone thinks that kind of thing doesn't happen here and is reserved for third-world countries. Glad your wife is doing better man!

In case anyone was wondering what happens to your nice stolen vehicles here's a little insight for you: (NSFW, watch at your own discretion)

 
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Joph

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Yep that basically sums up my assessment of that area. 8 years military/gov myself and have been around a bit, probably not nearly as much as you have but enough to be surprised by the stuff that goes on inside our borders when everyone thinks that kind of thing doesn't happen here and is reserved for third-world countries. Glad your wife is doing better man!

In case anyone was wondering what happens to your nice stolen vehicles here's a little insight for you:


you might want to add NSFW. Didnt expect to see people getting shot watching that..
 

Joph

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My apologies, the video is age-gated and made me verify my age to watch so assumed it would do that for everyone.

the age verification is correct. but that can mean anything. i guess it relative to the subject as well. just didnt expect a fatality. i assumed it was just going to be a undercover footage type video when i saw the still image. video started and was like ok maybe its just a typical raid and arrest footage. boy was i wrong for the first 30 seconds. that was intense. any context to this footage?

i assume most people are adults on here. plus if someone is at work, they may not want to click on that during office hours.
 
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FrodoTBaggins88

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the age verification is correct. but that can mean anything. i guess it relative to the subject as well. just didnt expect a fatality. i assumed it was just going to be a undercover footage type video when i saw the still image. video started and was like ok maybe its just a typical raid and arrest footage. boy was i wrong for the first 30 seconds. that was intense. any context to this footage?

i assume most people are adults on here. plus if someone is at work, they may not want to click on that during office hours.

Well this is footage from cartel activities in Mexico. It was sent to me by a border patrol buddy who knows some things about stolen cars/motorcycles being trafficked down to Mexico to be used for said activities. He said they often recover stolen vehicles littered with bullet holes. The trucks in the video were stolen from Texas. Apologies if this is a little too hardcore, I guess I am just accustomed to seeing this sort of thing. Mods can remove or I can remove it if it's offensive to you guys. I just wanted to make the point that it is a big business for the people who steal these for the cartel because the cartel needs trucks and they are disposable to them. It's a real issue, not just some internet folklore.
 
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