Pubdate: Wed, 02 Nov 2005 Source: Victoria News (CN BC) Copyright: 2005 Victoria News Contact: http://www.vicnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1267 Author: Brennan Clark Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) BAIT CARS CATCHING CAR THIEVES Imagine you've just stolen a car and realized too late the vehicle is a bait car that was planted by local police. Your every move is being captured on film and squad cars in the rear-view mirror will be moving in to arrest you as soon as central dispatch cuts the power to your engine. Most people would cut and run, but not the suspect in the bait car video Victoria police released last week. He whips out a crack pipe and torches it with a lighter in an effort to inhale one last hit of cocaine before police toss him in jail. "It really speaks to the power of the addiction," observed Victoria police Insp. Les Sylven during a recent media briefing held to tout the success of the bait car program. "He's obviously been through something like this before and the last thing he wants to do before he's taken into custody is take a hit off the pipe." According to police, the man in the video fits the profile of most car thieves in the province - a drug addicted young male stealing a vehicle to use as transportation in the course of committing other crimes. "Ninety-five per cent of stolen vehicles are not taken for the value of the vehicle," said RCMP Sgt. Tim Bain, one of several local officers who attended Thursday's briefing. "They're not stealing these cars to sell them. They're stealing them to go commit other crimes." The good news is that statistics indicate the province's bait car program has been highly effective at reducing auto theft in its first six months of existence on Vancouver Island. Since the program started in April, auto theft in Victoria and Esquimalt has dropped by 41 per cent compared to April-October 2004. Car theft in Nanaimo dropped by 31 per cent over the same period of time. Victoria police Sgt. Keith Lewis said while the numbers aren't definitive proof that the bait car program is responsible for the reduced auto theft rates, they clearly indicate a change in the usual pattern of crime. "Auto crime isn't really seasonal, but in the summer there's often a five per cent increase," Lewis said. "This summer we did not see the increase we usually see." Bait cars, used on the Lower Mainland since 2002, are equipped with video cameras, remote-controlled ignition switches and global positioning systems that alert police dispatchers the moment auto thieves break in. In addition to curbing auto theft and related crime, the bait car program has public safety benefits, Lewis pointed out. "We'll never ever have to do a pursuit with the bait cars because we're holding the keys," lewis said. Police are reluctant to discuss where and when the cars are deployed, but admit the program has yet to touch all corners of the Capital Region. However statistics from Saanich also indicate a sharp drop in auto theft, from 119 between April and October 2004 to 73 over the same time period in 2005. Saanich police spokesman Const. John Price attributed the decline to the bait car program and the recent expansion of the detachment's Block Watch program to include commercial premises. Since the change, Saanich police officers have had success cracking down on would-be thieves prowling local mall parking lots for cars to steal, Price said. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin