Payback is a Beyotch Baby! Huge, Profitable Cat Converter Ring Busted! ?

AbleGuy

Officious Intermeddler
Finally…some long overdue payback! We obviously wouldn’t have the frustrating, disgusting catalytic converter theft problems nationwide if no one could buy the stolen equipment. It’s taken a while to nab the buyers, but here’s a great start! The amount of money involved here is stunning!

DOJ busts $545 million catalytic converter theft ring
Emissions equipment theft is incredibly lucrative
Byron Hurd
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The U.S. Department of Justice announced Wednesday that it took down a national catalytic converter theft ring responsible for funneling tens of millions of dollars in stolen components through a metal refinery. A total of 21 defendants have been charged in two separate indictments that also led to the seizure of nearly $550 million in assets, including homes, bank accounts, cash and — you guessed it — luxury cars.

"Amidst a rise in catalytic converter thefts across the country, the Justice Department has today carried out an operation arresting 21 defendants and executing 32 search warrants in a nation-wide takedown of a multimillion-dollar catalytic converter theft network,” said Attorney General Merrick B. Garland in DOJ's announcement. “We will continue to work alongside our state and local partners to disrupt criminal conspiracies like this one that target the American people."

The indictments were unsealed in the Eastern District of California and the Northern District of Oklahoma. The California case will be brought against nine defendants charged with conspiracy to transport stolen catalytic converters, conspiracy to commit money laundering, and other related charges. Three people (two siblings and a third party) in Sacramento are charged with purchasing stolen catalytic converters and shipping them to New Jersey for processing; the DOJ says the three funneled $38 million in stolen cats to the the NJ outfit, DG Auto PartsLLC.

The Oklahoma case charges 13 defendants with 40 counts of conspiracy to receive stolen catalytic converters, conspiracy to commit money laundering, and other related charges. They are accused of operating in broadly the same manner as the defendants in California, up to and including channeling their stolen parts through DG Auto. One member of the NJ ring received more than $45 million from DG Auto in exchange for stolen catalytic converter cores, with others receiving payments totaling between $6 and $13 million.

"Just like the precious metal inside every catalytic converter, there’s a money trail at the core of every criminal scheme,” said IRS investigator Jim Lee. “Our IRS-CI special agents and partners are incredibly well-versed at unraveling financial trails, and this case is not unique. There are real victims here – friends, neighbors, and businesses – and our hope is that today’s arrests will deter similar criminal activity.”


 

dstefan

Well-known member
Well, you would care if you lived where this is rampant and you had a popularly targeted vehicle. There’s a ton of folks jumping through hoops and spending on “general modifications” to protect their cats. Etching, plates added to the sides of skid plates, alarms, cages, etc. Just saying …
 

calicamper

Expedition Leader
Well, you would care if you lived where this is rampant and you had a popularly targeted vehicle. There’s a ton of folks jumping through hoops and spending on “general modifications” to protect their cats. Etching, plates added to the sides of skid plates, alarms, cages, etc. Just saying …
My place is literally end of road canyon housing area 12 miles from the highway and not a drive thru location you just pass thru between point A and B.
Also rare we have our own PD. I have a creek that runs behind my place and under our street between my place and my neighbors which creates a large stretch of curb with what feels like a unwatched spot on our street.
Last week I called the PD twice for two different vehicles all blacked out windows even front windshield no plates, sitting over there idling watching neighbors come and go. Both times PD ended up in a car chase with the vehicles didn’t get them stopped.
My youngest is getting into building robots and a family member is on the top US HS robotics team. I’m seriously thinking of starting a robotics company and working on solutions for quickly ending vehicle pursuits. It’s gotten so stupid that police officers consider it the most likely response now. Which only puts far more people at risk with idiots racing thru school zones, neighborhoods etc in stolen vehicles they don’t give a crap if they wreck.

We have had a few neighbors hit by the catalytic converter theft also. Same type of crooks.
 

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