• How a fed up carpenter found his stolen power tools - and 15, 000 other

    From Martin Redford@21:1/5 to All on Sat Jun 1 08:38:52 2024
    XPost: alt.home.repair, va.politics, sac.politics
    XPost: talk.politics.guns

    Twice before, this Virginia carpenter had awoken in the predawn to start his work day only to find one of his vans broken into. Tools he depends on for a living had been stolen, and there was little hope of retrieving them. Determined to shut down thieves, he said, he bought a bunch of Apple AirTags and hid the locator devices in some of his larger tools that hadn’t been pilfered. Next time, he figured, he would track them.

    It worked.

    On Jan. 22, after a third break-in and theft, the carpenter said, he drove around D.C.’s Maryland suburbs for hours, following an intermittent blip on his iPhone, until he arrived at a storage facility in Howard County. He
    called police, who got a search warrant, and what they found in the locker
    was far more than just one contractor’s nail guns and miter saws.
    The storage unit, stuffed with purloined power tools, led detectives to
    similar caches in other places in the next four months — 12 locations in
    all, 11 of them in Howard County — and the recovery of about 15,000 saws, drills, sanders, grinders, generators, batteries, air compressors and other portable (meaning easily stealable) construction equipment worth an
    estimated $3 million to $5 million, authorities said.

    “One of the largest theft cases not only in Howard County but in this region,” Police Chief Gregory Der told reporters recently, standing in a county warehouse where the reclaimed loot is piled neatly along walls and stacked high on shelves. “The scope of the investigation is enormous and ongoing,” the chief said, adding, “We believe the tools were stolen from retail stores, businesses, vehicles, residential properties and construction sites.”

    Though none of the prolific thieves has been arrested yet, Der said, “we are investigating several suspects for their roles in this massive theft scheme
    and expect charges soon.”

    “Yes, yes, I hope they do,” said the 43-year-old carpenter in Sterling, Va.,
    who helped crack the case and spoke on the condition of anonymity to protect his safety. “Jail for them.”

    Howard police provided contact information for the carpenter, who said his
    home remodeling business employs 14 workers. He lost about 50 tools in the January theft and has gotten back a half-dozen of them, he said. He is
    hoping for more.

    “They don’t know what they do to me,” he said of the thieves. “They steal
    our job.”

    Seth Hoffman, a Howard County police spokesman, said investigators think
    most of the 15,000 or so tools were stolen in Northern Virginia and Pennsylvania. Howard County is just where they were stashed. He said about a quarter of the tools are in store boxes with labels that make them
    traceable. Some were stolen as long ago as 2014, he said. As for the
    thousands of loose and well-used tools now in the county warehouse, it’s
    hard to tell who owns them.

    “Oh, man, it’s basically every kind of tool you can think of,” Hoffman said.
    “Basically any kind of tool you can put in a car or a pickup and drive away with. I mean, it’s some kind of inventory.”

    Der said detectives have identified about 80 victims so far, “and we believe there are hundreds if not thousands more.” Police created an online form for people to fill out if they think their stolen tools might be somewhere in
    the piles. It asks for serial numbers, receipts, photos or any “identifying marks, initials, or numbers.” Authorities declined to discuss further
    details of the investigation

    As of Wednesday, Hoffman said, 140 forms had been submitted since police announced the recovery last week, and officers are trying to reunite victims with their implements. “A huge undertaking,” was how Der described it.

    “These thefts affect their livelihoods,” the chief said. “We’ve heard from
    victims who lost work because of their tools. It goes well beyond the cost
    of replacing the tools.”

    https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/crime/arrests-made-in-multi-county-jewelry- theft-ring-that-cost-businesses-1-5-million/ar-BB1nq9m1

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  • From micky@21:1/5 to [email protected] on Sat Jun 1 23:28:08 2024
    XPost: alt.home.repair, va.politics, sac.politics
    XPost: talk.politics.guns

    In alt.home.repair, on Sat, 1 Jun 2024 08:38:52 +0100, Martin Redford <[email protected]> wrote:

    Twice before, this Virginia carpenter had awoken in the predawn to start his >work day only to find one of his vans broken into. Tools he depends on for a >living had been stolen, and there was little hope of retrieving them. >Determined to shut down thieves, he said, he bought a bunch of Apple AirTags >and hid the locator devices in some of his larger tools that hadn’t been >pilfered. Next time, he figured, he would track them.

    It worked.

    On Jan. 22, after a third break-in and theft, the carpenter said, he drove >around D.C.’s Maryland suburbs for hours, following an intermittent blip on >his iPhone, until he arrived at a storage facility in Howard County. He >called police, who got a search warrant, and what they found in the locker >was far more than just one contractor’s nail guns and miter saws.
    The storage unit, stuffed with purloined power tools, led detectives to >similar caches in other places in the next four months — 12 locations in >all, 11 of them in Howard County — and the recovery of about 15,000 saws, >drills, sanders, grinders, generators, batteries, air compressors and other >portable (meaning easily stealable) construction equipment worth an
    estimated $3 million to $5 million, authorities said.

    Good for him, and the police investigators.

    I don't think the thieves understand the basic rationale behind
    stealing. It's not to stockpile loot, 15 THOUSAND tools, and pay for
    its storage space too. It's to sell the stuff and get money for it.

    Some stolen 10 years ago! Were they waiting for the price of tools to
    go up?

    I thing the head of the gang was a refugee from, isn't there some TV
    show called Hoarders.

    They've done all this since Jan 22. I think the police will catch the
    dirty doers.

    “One of the largest theft cases not only in Howard County but in this >region,�? Police Chief Gregory Der told reporters recently, standing in a >county warehouse where the reclaimed loot is piled neatly along walls and

    Neat, that's good, and a hallmark of some hoarders.

    stacked high on shelves. “The scope of the investigation is enormous and >ongoing,�? the chief said, adding, “We believe the tools were stolen from >retail stores, businesses, vehicles, residential properties and construction >sites.�?

    Though none of the prolific thieves has been arrested yet, Der said, “we are >investigating several suspects for their roles in this massive theft scheme >and expect charges soon.�?

    “Yes, yes, I hope they do,�? said the 43-year-old carpenter in Sterling, Va.,
    who helped crack the case and spoke on the condition of anonymity to protect >his safety. “Jail for them.�?

    Howard police provided contact information for the carpenter, who said his >home remodeling business employs 14 workers. He lost about 50 tools in the >January theft and has gotten back a half-dozen of them, he said. He is
    hoping for more.

    “They don’t know what they do to me,�? he said of the thieves. “They steal
    our job.�?

    Seth Hoffman, a Howard County police spokesman, said investigators think
    most of the 15,000 or so tools were stolen in Northern Virginia and >Pennsylvania. Howard County is just where they were stashed. He said about a >quarter of the tools are in store boxes with labels that make them
    traceable. Some were stolen as long ago as 2014, he said. As for the >thousands of loose and well-used tools now in the county warehouse, it’s >hard to tell who owns them.

    “Oh, man, it’s basically every kind of tool you can think of,�? Hoffman said.
    “Basically any kind of tool you can put in a car or a pickup and drive away >with. I mean, it’s some kind of inventory.�?

    Der said detectives have identified about 80 victims so far, “and we believe >there are hundreds if not thousands more.�? Police created an online form for >people to fill out if they think their stolen tools might be somewhere in
    the piles. It asks for serial numbers, receipts, photos or any “identifying >marks, initials, or numbers.�? Authorities declined to discuss further >details of the investigation

    As of Wednesday, Hoffman said, 140 forms had been submitted since police >announced the recovery last week, and officers are trying to reunite victims >with their implements. “A huge undertaking,�? was how Der described it.

    “These thefts affect their livelihoods,�? the chief said. “We’ve heard from
    victims who lost work because of their tools. It goes well beyond the cost
    of replacing the tools.�?

    https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/crime/arrests-made-in-multi-county-jewelry- >theft-ring-that-cost-businesses-1-5-million/ar-BB1nq9m1

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  • From slothe@21:1/5 to All on Sun Jun 2 20:40:20 2024
    XPost: alt.home.repair, va.politics, sac.politics
    XPost: talk.politics.guns

    On 01 Jun 2024, micky <[email protected]> posted some news:[email protected]:

    In alt.home.repair, on Sat, 1 Jun 2024 08:38:52 +0100, Martin Redford
    <[email protected]> wrote:

    Twice before, this Virginia carpenter had awoken in the predawn to
    start his work day only to find one of his vans broken into. Tools he >>depends on for a living had been stolen, and there was little hope of >>retrieving them. Determined to shut down thieves, he said, he bought a >>bunch of Apple AirTags and hid the locator devices in some of his
    larger tools that hadn’t been pilfered. Next time, he figured, he
    would track them.

    It worked.

    On Jan. 22, after a third break-in and theft, the carpenter said, he
    drove around D.C.’s Maryland suburbs for hours, following an
    intermittent blip on his iPhone, until he arrived at a storage
    facility in Howard County. He called police, who got a search warrant,
    and what they found in the locker was far more than just one
    contractor’s nail guns and miter saws. The storage unit, stuffed
    with purloined power tools, led detectives to similar caches in other >>places in the next four months — 12 locations in all, 11 of them in >>Howard County — and the recovery of about 15,000 saws, drills,
    sanders, grinders, generators, batteries, air compressors and other >>portable (meaning easily stealable) construction equipment worth an >>estimated $3 million to $5 million, authorities said.

    Good for him, and the police investigators.

    I don't think the thieves understand the basic rationale behind
    stealing. It's not to stockpile loot, 15 THOUSAND tools, and pay for
    its storage space too. It's to sell the stuff and get money for it.

    Why the heck would you keep evidence of a crime?

    Some stolen 10 years ago! Were they waiting for the price of tools to
    go up?

    I thing the head of the gang was a refugee from, isn't there some TV
    show called Hoarders.

    They've done all this since Jan 22. I think the police will catch the
    dirty doers.

    12 locations. They should have set up a sting to see who was coming and
    going.


    “One of the largest theft cases not only in Howard County but in
    this region,�? Police Chief Gregory Der told reporters recently,
    standing in a county warehouse where the reclaimed loot is piled
    neatly along walls and

    Neat, that's good, and a hallmark of some hoarders.

    stacked high on shelves. “The scope of the investigation is enormous
    and ongoing,�? the chief said, adding, “We believe the tools were
    stolen from retail stores, businesses, vehicles, residential
    properties and construction sites.�?

    A lot of construction sites put remote cameras up now.

    https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/crime/arrests-made-in-multi-county-jewel
    ry- theft-ring-that-cost-businesses-1-5-million/ar-BB1nq9m1

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  • From micky@21:1/5 to [email protected] on Sun Jun 2 17:44:45 2024
    XPost: alt.home.repair, va.politics, sac.politics
    XPost: talk.politics.guns

    In alt.home.repair, on Sun, 2 Jun 2024 20:40:20 -0000 (UTC), slothe <[email protected]> wrote:


    stacked high on shelves. “The scope of the investigation is enormous >>>and ongoing,�? the chief said, adding, “We believe the tools were >>>stolen from retail stores, businesses, vehicles, residential
    properties and construction sites.�?

    A lot of construction sites put remote cameras up now.

    I thought that was just to make construction videos for Youtube. I'll
    be more careful now.

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