How, you ask? Apparently thieves figure that tourists typically are:
likely to be carrying more valuable stuff in their cars than typical localsonce parked, likely to leave their cars unattended for extended time periodsless likely to know local “avoid” spots;more likely to be conned into doing something stupidlikely to want to keep to their schedules and leave an area rather than stick around to file police reports, ID perps, or testify at hearings or trials.
And a rental car is a high-probability sign of a tourist.
All rental cars typically show a sign or two. Although apparently you no longer see rental car fleets with licenses with something like “AV” or “HZ” in the registration number, rental cars usually carry less obvious identifiers. Typically rental companies fasten barcode stickers or identifying decals to windows, maybe both front and back, or maybe on the plate, to provide for entry in and out of parking lots and various scans of the car’s status. Some rental companies may equip cars with company license plate holders. Presumably, astute thieves know these identifiers, and you can’t do much about it. Even just an out-of-state license at least indicates a potential tourist.
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Whether in a rented car, an out-of-state car, or even your own car, if you search the Internet for “theft from tourists’ cars” or similar, your search will return a laundry list of tips. Almost all stress that you shouldn’t leave attractive target items such as cameras, computers, smart phones, and jewelry in plain sight when you park a car and leave it for a while. Don’t leave guidebooks and maps in plain sight. They even suggest hiding charging cords, which indicate that there’s something tempting nearby. They note that thieves tend to focus on spots with heavy visitor traffic, such as parking lots for national parks, famous monuments, and airports. One source even suggested leaving a copy of a local newspaper on the seat to try to show you’re a local.
Most sources strongly recommend making sure that your parked car and trunk are locked. In years past, some rental companies suggested leaving car doors and trunks unlocked, figuring that theft is inevitable and leaving your car unlocked means it will suffer no damage, but I haven’t seen that recommendation lately.
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Rental car theft has, not surprisingly, recently gained a new high-tech variant. If you rent a “connected” car and charge your smart phone or tablet using a USB cable, the car’s system may gain access to personal data on your device. For now, this possibility seems to be more of a conjecture on tech blogs rather than a real problem, but you can bet someone is working on a related scam.
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The take-away is that no matter how many precautions you take, you can never be 100 percent safe from theft. That means leaving as much of your “absolutely can’t lose” stuff as you can at home when you travel, and keeping what you need for your trip with you at all times. Beyond that, make sure you have personal property insurance and receipts for big-ticket items to show the loss if you get hit. And, use an adapter with the car’s “dumb” 12-volt power port or cigarette lighter socket to charge your smart device.
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