Observe: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car, Q13 FOX News

See: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car

SEATTLE — A West Seattle man is sharing a surveillance movie that shows the panicking way thieves are using technology to break into cars.

Observe the movie as a man approaches Tom Dahl’s truck in this driveway. He attempts the treat, but the door is locked. So he takes off his backpack, moves it close to the window. Seconds later, he’s able to get inwards.

Photo Gallery

“He opens the door up,” says Dahl. “The lights went on, it was disarmed.”

Dahl is glad the thief didn’t take his truck. All he did was rummage through the contents of his glove compartment.

“I was brainy enough not to carry anything of value in there. That’s what he was looking for.”

But Dahl is worried about how the thief got in so lightly.

“You used to have a wire that you slipped down the window, when it was mechanical. But now it’s electronic.”

Cases like this are becoming more common across the region.

Lars Carlson says the man who broke into his car in January also appeared to be carrying something in a backpack.

“It’s running through codes automatically or it’s a button they’re pushing or something is happening. But whatever it does, it seems to trick the car into thinking he’s got the legitimate keys.”

Seattle police say they don’t know exactly what kind of device thieves are using, or how it works. But they are worried.

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

Dahl says automakers need to do something to give people a little more security. But until that happens, he’s going to share this movie with as many neighbors as he can.

“I hope other people pay attention, make sure things are secure and locked, and don’t keep things in your car that are of any value.”

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

thirty two comments

Slam1263 (@IKnowBO)

It is just a random code transmitter.

They can transmit a million codes with the thrust of a button.

Tow truck driver have been using them for over twenty years.

Don’t the receivers limit the number of failed attempts per 2nd?

Sadly No they don’t

Rodger Wolkins

They need to emit a cloud of pepper sploog after three failed attempts.

Fresh Man

Then cars in parking lots would permanently be admitting pepper sploog, in a parking lot hundreds of remote keys are used permanently, so it has to be able to see signals without assuming it is failed attempts. They need to increase the complexity of the codes, add more bits, make it too hard to crack.

ashford
lionfan

Can very likely take the entire damn car if it uses keyless ignition, right?

Testicules

For most cars, the thief would still have to deal with the mechanical steering lock that is released by the mechanical portion of the key.

As for some cars that now have keyless thrust button commence features… ?

clovellstc

The car permanently scans for the key. Since this is most likely just a device and sends out a bunch of signals in a row he wouldn’t know which one was for the car, so I doubt it would work on the ignition.

Phillip Coiner

I know how they are doing it. Have the cops send me an e-mail

john Bowler

See a classic Forrest Whitaker film “Ghost Dog”. The hero uses one of those code generators to steal luxury cars.

So, They may steal them from Tow Truck Drivers?

Tester

The device works by “pinging” the FOB on the key chain which, in turn, generates a signal to the vehicle. The device only works when the keys are within operational range of the vehicle.

Frank

This techbology isn’t fresh, over a decade old if anything. They demonstrated this in the movie, ‘Gone in sixty Seconds’.

Device is available on aliexpress from china for $600 or less. Clones key fobs and can transmit them. It’s not a mystery.

Thats not how they work. You need access to the original keys and the car to make a clone.

Most people keep their registration and garage door opener in their car. If a thief witnesses you leave your vehicle in a parking lot and can access your car this way, he can go to your home and rob it while you’re shopping or standing in the parking lot wondering where your car is.

Dan Darius

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

It’s a shame that cops are always reactive instead of proactive.

Dan Darius
Dee Ouchman

It’s a ordinary Tesla coil which energised the door lock/unlock servo.

Justa Joe

I don’t need a fresh car that badly. My two thousand five Ford Concentrate has manual (mechanical) doorlocks, manual (palm crank) windows, and a 5-speed manual transmission. Its also carrying 275,000 miles on the odometer.

I’m in no fear of anyone attempting to steal my wheels.

Marc M

Yes, we have the exact same car – two thousand five Ford Concentrate. Looks like a ruddy ordnance vehicle, but I like it because it has NOTHING (except AC). Manual trans, windows, everything. And a freakin’ metal key. I do not like this fresh crap. “The more the over-think the plumbing, the lighter it is to stop up the drain,” in the words of Scotty. And every excursion to the stealership to fix the over-thought under-engineered geek fucktoys is an exercise on your wallet.

This is finish rubbish. The rolling code protocol (keyloq) used by keyless entry will only permit two hundred fifty six code attempts before the original key will need to be reset. This is a hoax.

George Johnson

Evidently the cops are NOT one step ahead of the criminals.

Starheart

There are too many COPS that ARE the CRIMINALS OUT THERE.

pithypaul

The thief is going to sue for invasion of his own privacy, as nobody asked him for permission to use his photo. Hey, this is Amerika.

SMARTERTHANYOU

Wow.. these reporters, especially the police department, are frankly imbeciles! The technology is over a decade old, it’s called a laptop and a receiver.

Starheart

Homeland Security Personnel are using very advanced electronic technology to hack into everything now.

People like Kay Griggs, Michael Hastings, Phillip Marshall, Judi Bari and myself have been targeted by some of these these special ops Homeland Security personnel involved in criminal operations in the US. They have been promoting and rewarding war criminals for years from the CIA and Military Black Sites and Torment Facilities, into Homeland Security, FBI, Law Enforcement, and other government agencies across the country, to target citizens for surveillance and crimes.

(Witness Kay Griggs movies on you tube, as she gives her testimonial for what has been going on for a long time now.)

Since 2011, I’ve been targeted for surveillance burglaries, vandalism, pet torment, vehicle tampering as well as the planting of stolen and unknown origin property and malicious prosecution. My safe deposit box in, Colville, WA ,was even burglarized. I can’t find any organization to help me, out of the dozens and dozens of civil and constitutional rights organizations and attorneys I’ve contacted. I had to get a private investigator to trace license plates and find out who some of the people involved in these targeted black operations are.

I can’t get my FOIA Requests fulfilled for information on my surveillance “Watch List” targeted crimes and it’s even common skill in Washington state that Homeland Security personnel are involved in my targeted surveillance and gang stalking crimes. There has even been one out of court settlement in one case in the Seattle area for these criminal activities by Homeland Security Personnel.

My cruise control stopped working on my one hundred forty mile tour back from Spokane WA, on Thursday February 26th (about two weeks ago), and I was gang stalked on the road by numerous vehicles (one of them with a Big Transformer Decal on the Back Window, one with a Big US “Infantry” sticker on his back window, as well as by WA license plate # WEPLAY2) and after they all turned off and I got past Colville, WA, I attempted my cruise control again and it began working. I know they have had remote control over my car alarms on my vehicles for a long time now, and it looks to me that they can also remote control my cruise control as well now……

They have been using FOIA DENIALS, FOIA APPEAL DENIALS, GAG ORDERS, NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS AND EVEN – “CLASSIFYING” INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COVER UP THEIR CRIMES AGAINST TARGETED INDIVIDUALS, ACTIVISTS AND JOURNALISTS.

See: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car, Q13 FOX News

Witness: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car

SEATTLE — A West Seattle man is sharing a surveillance movie that shows the panicking way thieves are using technology to break into cars.

See the movie as a man approaches Tom Dahl’s truck in this driveway. He attempts the treat, but the door is locked. So he takes off his backpack, moves it close to the window. Seconds later, he’s able to get inwards.

Photo Gallery

“He opens the door up,” says Dahl. “The lights went on, it was disarmed.”

Dahl is glad the thief didn’t take his truck. All he did was rummage through the contents of his glove compartment.

“I was clever enough not to carry anything of value in there. That’s what he was looking for.”

But Dahl is worried about how the thief got in so lightly.

“You used to have a wire that you glided down the window, when it was mechanical. But now it’s electronic.”

Cases like this are becoming more common across the region.

Lars Carlson says the man who broke into his car in January also appeared to be carrying something in a backpack.

“It’s running through codes automatically or it’s a button they’re pushing or something is happening. But whatever it does, it seems to trick the car into thinking he’s got the legitimate keys.”

Seattle police say they don’t know exactly what kind of device thieves are using, or how it works. But they are worried.

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

Dahl says automakers need to do something to give people a little more security. But until that happens, he’s going to share this movie with as many neighbors as he can.

“I hope other people pay attention, make sure things are secure and locked, and don’t keep things in your car that are of any value.”

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

thirty two comments

Slam1263 (@IKnowBO)

It is just a random code transmitter.

They can transmit a million codes with the thrust of a button.

Tow truck driver have been using them for over twenty years.

Don’t the receivers limit the number of failed attempts per 2nd?

Sadly No they don’t

Rodger Wolkins

They need to emit a cloud of pepper sploog after three failed attempts.

Fresh Boy

Then cars in parking lots would permanently be admitting pepper dump, in a parking lot hundreds of remote keys are used permanently, so it has to be able to see signals without assuming it is failed attempts. They need to increase the complexity of the codes, add more bits, make it too hard to crack.

ashford
lionfan

Can very likely take the entire damn car if it uses keyless ignition, right?

Testicules

For most cars, the thief would still have to deal with the mechanical steering lock that is released by the mechanical portion of the key.

As for some cars that now have keyless shove button embark features… ?

clovellstc

The car permanently scans for the key. Since this is most likely just a device and sends out a bunch of signals in a row he wouldn’t know which one was for the car, so I doubt it would work on the ignition.

Phillip Coiner

I know how they are doing it. Have the cops send me an e-mail

john Bowler

Witness a classic Forrest Whitaker film “Ghost Dog”. The hero uses one of those code generators to steal luxury cars.

So, They may steal them from Tow Truck Drivers?

Tester

The device works by “pinging” the FOB on the key chain which, in turn, generates a signal to the vehicle. The device only works when the keys are within operational range of the vehicle.

Frank

This techbology isn’t fresh, over a decade old if anything. They demonstrated this in the movie, ‘Gone in sixty Seconds’.

Device is available on aliexpress from china for $600 or less. Clones key fobs and can transmit them. It’s not a mystery.

Thats not how they work. You need access to the original keys and the car to make a clone.

Most people keep their registration and garage door opener in their car. If a thief sees you leave your vehicle in a parking lot and can access your car this way, he can go to your home and rob it while you’re shopping or standing in the parking lot wondering where your car is.

Dan Darius

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

It’s a shame that cops are always reactive instead of proactive.

Dan Darius
Dee Ouchman

It’s a ordinary Tesla coil which energised the door lock/unlock servo.

Justa Joe

I don’t need a fresh car that badly. My two thousand five Ford Concentrate has manual (mechanical) doorlocks, manual (forearm crank) windows, and a 5-speed manual transmission. Its also carrying 275,000 miles on the odometer.

I’m in no fear of anyone attempting to steal my wheels.

Marc M

Yes, we have the exact same car – two thousand five Ford Concentrate. Looks like a ruddy ordnance vehicle, but I like it because it has NOTHING (except AC). Manual trans, windows, everything. And a freakin’ metal key. I do not like this fresh crap. “The more the over-think the plumbing, the lighter it is to stop up the drain,” in the words of Scotty. And every excursion to the stealership to fix the over-thought under-engineered geek fucktoys is an exercise on your wallet.

This is accomplish rubbish. The rolling code protocol (keyloq) used by keyless entry will only permit two hundred fifty six code attempts before the original key will need to be reset. This is a hoax.

George Johnson

Evidently the cops are NOT one step ahead of the criminals.

Starheart

There are too many COPS that ARE the CRIMINALS OUT THERE.

pithypaul

The thief is going to sue for invasion of his own privacy, as nobody asked him for permission to use his pic. Hey, this is Amerika.

SMARTERTHANYOU

Wow.. these reporters, especially the police department, are frankly imbeciles! The technology is over a decade old, it’s called a laptop and a receiver.

Starheart

Homeland Security Personnel are using very advanced electronic technology to hack into everything now.

People like Kay Griggs, Michael Hastings, Phillip Marshall, Judi Bari and myself have been targeted by some of these these special ops Homeland Security personnel involved in criminal operations in the US. They have been promoting and rewarding war criminals for years from the CIA and Military Black Sites and Torment Facilities, into Homeland Security, FBI, Law Enforcement, and other government agencies across the country, to target citizens for surveillance and crimes.

(Witness Kay Griggs movies on you tube, as she gives her testimonial for what has been going on for a long time now.)

Since 2011, I’ve been targeted for surveillance burglaries, vandalism, pet torment, vehicle tampering as well as the planting of stolen and unknown origin property and malicious prosecution. My safe deposit box in, Colville, WA ,was even burglarized. I can’t find any organization to help me, out of the dozens and dozens of civil and constitutional rights organizations and attorneys I’ve contacted. I had to get a private investigator to trace license plates and find out who some of the people involved in these targeted black operations are.

I can’t get my FOIA Requests fulfilled for information on my surveillance “Watch List” targeted crimes and it’s even common skill in Washington state that Homeland Security personnel are involved in my targeted surveillance and gang stalking crimes. There has even been one out of court settlement in one case in the Seattle area for these criminal activities by Homeland Security Personnel.

My cruise control stopped working on my one hundred forty mile excursion back from Spokane WA, on Thursday February 26th (about two weeks ago), and I was gang stalked on the road by numerous vehicles (one of them with a Big Transformer Decal on the Back Window, one with a Big US “Infantry” sticker on his back window, as well as by WA license plate # WEPLAY2) and after they all turned off and I got past Colville, WA, I attempted my cruise control again and it began working. I know they have had remote control over my car alarms on my vehicles for a long time now, and it looks to me that they can also remote control my cruise control as well now……

They have been using FOIA DENIALS, FOIA APPEAL DENIALS, GAG ORDERS, NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS AND EVEN – “CLASSIFYING” INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COVER UP THEIR CRIMES AGAINST TARGETED INDIVIDUALS, ACTIVISTS AND JOURNALISTS.

See: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car, Q13 FOX News

See: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car

SEATTLE — A West Seattle man is sharing a surveillance movie that shows the panicking way thieves are using technology to break into cars.

Observe the movie as a man approaches Tom Dahl’s truck in this driveway. He attempts the treat, but the door is locked. So he takes off his backpack, moves it close to the window. Seconds later, he’s able to get inwards.

Photo Gallery

“He opens the door up,” says Dahl. “The lights went on, it was disarmed.”

Dahl is glad the thief didn’t take his truck. All he did was rummage through the contents of his glove compartment.

“I was brainy enough not to carry anything of value in there. That’s what he was looking for.”

But Dahl is worried about how the thief got in so lightly.

“You used to have a wire that you glided down the window, when it was mechanical. But now it’s electronic.”

Cases like this are becoming more common across the region.

Lars Carlson says the man who broke into his car in January also appeared to be carrying something in a backpack.

“It’s running through codes automatically or it’s a button they’re pushing or something is happening. But whatever it does, it seems to trick the car into thinking he’s got the legitimate keys.”

Seattle police say they don’t know exactly what kind of device thieves are using, or how it works. But they are worried.

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

Dahl says automakers need to do something to give people a little more security. But until that happens, he’s going to share this movie with as many neighbors as he can.

“I hope other people pay attention, make sure things are secure and locked, and don’t keep things in your car that are of any value.”

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

thirty two comments

Slam1263 (@IKnowBO)

It is just a random code transmitter.

They can transmit a million codes with the shove of a button.

Tow truck driver have been using them for over twenty years.

Don’t the receivers limit the number of failed attempts per 2nd?

Sadly No they don’t

Rodger Wolkins

They need to emit a cloud of pepper squirt after three failed attempts.

Fresh Dude

Then cars in parking lots would permanently be admitting pepper splatter, in a parking lot hundreds of remote keys are used permanently, so it has to be able to see signals without assuming it is failed attempts. They need to increase the complexity of the codes, add more bits, make it too hard to crack.

ashford
lionfan

Can very likely take the entire damn car if it uses keyless ignition, right?

Testicules

For most cars, the thief would still have to deal with the mechanical steering lock that is released by the mechanical portion of the key.

As for some cars that now have keyless thrust button commence features… ?

clovellstc

The car permanently scans for the key. Since this is most likely just a device and sends out a bunch of signals in a row he wouldn’t know which one was for the car, so I doubt it would work on the ignition.

Phillip Coiner

I know how they are doing it. Have the cops send me an e-mail

john Bowler

See a classic Forrest Whitaker film “Ghost Dog”. The hero uses one of those code generators to steal luxury cars.

So, They may steal them from Tow Truck Drivers?

Tester

The device works by “pinging” the FOB on the key chain which, in turn, generates a signal to the vehicle. The device only works when the keys are within operational range of the vehicle.

Frank

This techbology isn’t fresh, over a decade old if anything. They demonstrated this in the movie, ‘Gone in sixty Seconds’.

Device is available on aliexpress from china for $600 or less. Clones key fobs and can transmit them. It’s not a mystery.

Thats not how they work. You need access to the original keys and the car to make a clone.

Most people keep their registration and garage door opener in their car. If a thief witnesses you leave your vehicle in a parking lot and can access your car this way, he can go to your home and rob it while you’re shopping or standing in the parking lot wondering where your car is.

Dan Darius

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

It’s a shame that cops are always reactive instead of proactive.

Dan Darius
Dee Ouchman

It’s a ordinary Tesla coil which energised the door lock/unlock servo.

Justa Joe

I don’t need a fresh car that badly. My two thousand five Ford Concentrate has manual (mechanical) doorlocks, manual (forearm crank) windows, and a 5-speed manual transmission. Its also carrying 275,000 miles on the odometer.

I’m in no fear of anyone attempting to steal my wheels.

Marc M

Yes, we have the exact same car – two thousand five Ford Concentrate. Looks like a ruddy ordnance vehicle, but I like it because it has NOTHING (except AC). Manual trans, windows, everything. And a freakin’ metal key. I do not like this fresh crap. “The more the over-think the plumbing, the lighter it is to stop up the drain,” in the words of Scotty. And every journey to the stealership to fix the over-thought under-engineered geek fucktoys is an exercise on your wallet.

This is finish rubbish. The rolling code protocol (keyloq) used by keyless entry will only permit two hundred fifty six code attempts before the original key will need to be reset. This is a hoax.

George Johnson

Evidently the cops are NOT one step ahead of the criminals.

Starheart

There are too many COPS that ARE the CRIMINALS OUT THERE.

pithypaul

The thief is going to sue for invasion of his own privacy, as nobody asked him for permission to use his photo. Hey, this is Amerika.

SMARTERTHANYOU

Wow.. these reporters, especially the police department, are frankly imbeciles! The technology is over a decade old, it’s called a laptop and a receiver.

Starheart

Homeland Security Personnel are using very advanced electronic technology to hack into everything now.

People like Kay Griggs, Michael Hastings, Phillip Marshall, Judi Bari and myself have been targeted by some of these these special ops Homeland Security personnel involved in criminal operations in the US. They have been promoting and rewarding war criminals for years from the CIA and Military Black Sites and Torment Facilities, into Homeland Security, FBI, Law Enforcement, and other government agencies across the country, to target citizens for surveillance and crimes.

(See Kay Griggs movies on you tube, as she gives her testimonial for what has been going on for a long time now.)

Since 2011, I’ve been targeted for surveillance burglaries, vandalism, pet torment, vehicle tampering as well as the planting of stolen and unknown origin property and malicious prosecution. My safe deposit box in, Colville, WA ,was even burglarized. I can’t find any organization to help me, out of the dozens and dozens of civil and constitutional rights organizations and attorneys I’ve contacted. I had to get a private investigator to trace license plates and find out who some of the people involved in these targeted black operations are.

I can’t get my FOIA Requests fulfilled for information on my surveillance “Watch List” targeted crimes and it’s even common skill in Washington state that Homeland Security personnel are involved in my targeted surveillance and gang stalking crimes. There has even been one out of court settlement in one case in the Seattle area for these criminal activities by Homeland Security Personnel.

My cruise control stopped working on my one hundred forty mile journey back from Spokane WA, on Thursday February 26th (about two weeks ago), and I was gang stalked on the road by numerous vehicles (one of them with a Big Transformer Decal on the Back Window, one with a Big US “Infantry” sticker on his back window, as well as by WA license plate # WEPLAY2) and after they all turned off and I got past Colville, WA, I attempted my cruise control again and it embarked working. I know they have had remote control over my car alarms on my vehicles for a long time now, and it looks to me that they can also remote control my cruise control as well now……

They have been using FOIA DENIALS, FOIA APPEAL DENIALS, GAG ORDERS, NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS AND EVEN – “CLASSIFYING” INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COVER UP THEIR CRIMES AGAINST TARGETED INDIVIDUALS, ACTIVISTS AND JOURNALISTS.

Witness: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car, Q13 FOX News

Witness: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car

SEATTLE — A West Seattle man is sharing a surveillance movie that shows the panicking way thieves are using technology to break into cars.

Witness the movie as a man approaches Tom Dahl’s truck in this driveway. He attempts the treat, but the door is locked. So he takes off his backpack, moves it close to the window. Seconds later, he’s able to get inwards.

Photo Gallery

“He opens the door up,” says Dahl. “The lights went on, it was disarmed.”

Dahl is glad the thief didn’t take his truck. All he did was rummage through the contents of his glove compartment.

“I was clever enough not to carry anything of value in there. That’s what he was looking for.”

But Dahl is worried about how the thief got in so lightly.

“You used to have a wire that you glided down the window, when it was mechanical. But now it’s electronic.”

Cases like this are becoming more common across the region.

Lars Carlson says the man who broke into his car in January also appeared to be carrying something in a backpack.

“It’s running through codes automatically or it’s a button they’re pushing or something is happening. But whatever it does, it seems to trick the car into thinking he’s got the legitimate keys.”

Seattle police say they don’t know exactly what kind of device thieves are using, or how it works. But they are worried.

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

Dahl says automakers need to do something to give people a little more security. But until that happens, he’s going to share this movie with as many neighbors as he can.

“I hope other people pay attention, make sure things are secure and locked, and don’t keep things in your car that are of any value.”

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

thirty two comments

Slam1263 (@IKnowBO)

It is just a random code transmitter.

They can transmit a million codes with the shove of a button.

Tow truck driver have been using them for over twenty years.

Don’t the receivers limit the number of failed attempts per 2nd?

Sadly No they don’t

Rodger Wolkins

They need to emit a cloud of pepper splash after three failed attempts.

Fresh Stud

Then cars in parking lots would permanently be admitting pepper splatter, in a parking lot hundreds of remote keys are used permanently, so it has to be able to see signals without assuming it is failed attempts. They need to increase the complexity of the codes, add more bits, make it too hard to crack.

ashford
lionfan

Can very likely take the entire damn car if it uses keyless ignition, right?

Testicules

For most cars, the thief would still have to deal with the mechanical steering lock that is released by the mechanical portion of the key.

As for some cars that now have keyless thrust button commence features… ?

clovellstc

The car permanently scans for the key. Since this is very likely just a device and sends out a bunch of signals in a row he wouldn’t know which one was for the car, so I doubt it would work on the ignition.

Phillip Coiner

I know how they are doing it. Have the cops send me an e-mail

john Bowler

Witness a classic Forrest Whitaker film “Ghost Dog”. The hero uses one of those code generators to steal luxury cars.

So, They may steal them from Tow Truck Drivers?

Tester

The device works by “pinging” the FOB on the key chain which, in turn, generates a signal to the vehicle. The device only works when the keys are within operational range of the vehicle.

Frank

This techbology isn’t fresh, over a decade old if anything. They demonstrated this in the movie, ‘Gone in sixty Seconds’.

Device is available on aliexpress from china for $600 or less. Clones key fobs and can transmit them. It’s not a mystery.

Thats not how they work. You need access to the original keys and the car to make a clone.

Most people keep their registration and garage door opener in their car. If a thief witnesses you leave your vehicle in a parking lot and can access your car this way, he can go to your home and rob it while you’re shopping or standing in the parking lot wondering where your car is.

Dan Darius

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

It’s a shame that cops are always reactive instead of proactive.

Dan Darius
Dee Ouchman

It’s a elementary Tesla coil which energised the door lock/unlock servo.

Justa Joe

I don’t need a fresh car that badly. My two thousand five Ford Concentrate has manual (mechanical) doorlocks, manual (forearm crank) windows, and a 5-speed manual transmission. Its also carrying 275,000 miles on the odometer.

I’m in no fear of anyone attempting to steal my wheels.

Marc M

Yes, we have the exact same car – two thousand five Ford Concentrate. Looks like a ruddy ordnance vehicle, but I like it because it has NOTHING (except AC). Manual trans, windows, everything. And a freakin’ metal key. I do not like this fresh crap. “The more the over-think the plumbing, the lighter it is to stop up the drain,” in the words of Scotty. And every tour to the stealership to fix the over-thought under-engineered geek fucktoys is an exercise on your wallet.

This is accomplish rubbish. The rolling code protocol (keyloq) used by keyless entry will only permit two hundred fifty six code attempts before the original key will need to be reset. This is a hoax.

George Johnson

Evidently the cops are NOT one step ahead of the criminals.

Starheart

There are too many COPS that ARE the CRIMINALS OUT THERE.

pithypaul

The thief is going to sue for invasion of his own privacy, as nobody asked him for permission to use his pic. Hey, this is Amerika.

SMARTERTHANYOU

Wow.. these reporters, especially the police department, are frankly imbeciles! The technology is over a decade old, it’s called a laptop and a receiver.

Starheart

Homeland Security Personnel are using very advanced electronic technology to hack into everything now.

People like Kay Griggs, Michael Hastings, Phillip Marshall, Judi Bari and myself have been targeted by some of these these special ops Homeland Security personnel involved in criminal operations in the US. They have been promoting and rewarding war criminals for years from the CIA and Military Black Sites and Torment Facilities, into Homeland Security, FBI, Law Enforcement, and other government agencies across the country, to target citizens for surveillance and crimes.

(See Kay Griggs movies on you tube, as she gives her testimonial for what has been going on for a long time now.)

Since 2011, I’ve been targeted for surveillance burglaries, vandalism, pet torment, vehicle tampering as well as the planting of stolen and unknown origin property and malicious prosecution. My safe deposit box in, Colville, WA ,was even burglarized. I can’t find any organization to help me, out of the dozens and dozens of civil and constitutional rights organizations and attorneys I’ve contacted. I had to get a private investigator to trace license plates and find out who some of the people involved in these targeted black operations are.

I can’t get my FOIA Requests fulfilled for information on my surveillance “Watch List” targeted crimes and it’s even common skill in Washington state that Homeland Security personnel are involved in my targeted surveillance and gang stalking crimes. There has even been one out of court settlement in one case in the Seattle area for these criminal activities by Homeland Security Personnel.

My cruise control stopped working on my one hundred forty mile journey back from Spokane WA, on Thursday February 26th (about two weeks ago), and I was gang stalked on the road by numerous vehicles (one of them with a Big Transformer Decal on the Back Window, one with a Big US “Infantry” sticker on his back window, as well as by WA license plate # WEPLAY2) and after they all turned off and I got past Colville, WA, I attempted my cruise control again and it began working. I know they have had remote control over my car alarms on my vehicles for a long time now, and it looks to me that they can also remote control my cruise control as well now……

They have been using FOIA DENIALS, FOIA APPEAL DENIALS, GAG ORDERS, NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS AND EVEN – “CLASSIFYING” INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COVER UP THEIR CRIMES AGAINST TARGETED INDIVIDUALS, ACTIVISTS AND JOURNALISTS.

See: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car, Q13 FOX News

See: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car

SEATTLE — A West Seattle man is sharing a surveillance movie that shows the panicking way thieves are using technology to break into cars.

Observe the movie as a man approaches Tom Dahl’s truck in this driveway. He attempts the treat, but the door is locked. So he takes off his backpack, moves it close to the window. Seconds later, he’s able to get inwards.

Photo Gallery

“He opens the door up,” says Dahl. “The lights went on, it was disarmed.”

Dahl is glad the thief didn’t take his truck. All he did was rummage through the contents of his glove compartment.

“I was wise enough not to carry anything of value in there. That’s what he was looking for.”

But Dahl is worried about how the thief got in so lightly.

“You used to have a wire that you glided down the window, when it was mechanical. But now it’s electronic.”

Cases like this are becoming more common across the region.

Lars Carlson says the man who broke into his car in January also appeared to be carrying something in a backpack.

“It’s running through codes automatically or it’s a button they’re pushing or something is happening. But whatever it does, it seems to trick the car into thinking he’s got the legitimate keys.”

Seattle police say they don’t know exactly what kind of device thieves are using, or how it works. But they are worried.

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

Dahl says automakers need to do something to give people a little more security. But until that happens, he’s going to share this movie with as many neighbors as he can.

“I hope other people pay attention, make sure things are secure and locked, and don’t keep things in your car that are of any value.”

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

thirty two comments

Slam1263 (@IKnowBO)

It is just a random code transmitter.

They can transmit a million codes with the shove of a button.

Tow truck driver have been using them for over twenty years.

Don’t the receivers limit the number of failed attempts per 2nd?

Sadly No they don’t

Rodger Wolkins

They need to emit a cloud of pepper burst after three failed attempts.

Fresh Fellow

Then cars in parking lots would permanently be admitting pepper squirt, in a parking lot hundreds of remote keys are used permanently, so it has to be able to see signals without assuming it is failed attempts. They need to increase the complexity of the codes, add more bits, make it too hard to crack.

ashford
lionfan

Can very likely take the entire damn car if it uses keyless ignition, right?

Testicules

For most cars, the thief would still have to deal with the mechanical steering lock that is released by the mechanical portion of the key.

As for some cars that now have keyless thrust button embark features… ?

clovellstc

The car permanently scans for the key. Since this is very likely just a device and sends out a bunch of signals in a row he wouldn’t know which one was for the car, so I doubt it would work on the ignition.

Phillip Coiner

I know how they are doing it. Have the cops send me an e-mail

john Bowler

Observe a classic Forrest Whitaker film “Ghost Dog”. The hero uses one of those code generators to steal luxury cars.

So, They may steal them from Tow Truck Drivers?

Tester

The device works by “pinging” the FOB on the key chain which, in turn, generates a signal to the vehicle. The device only works when the keys are within operational range of the vehicle.

Frank

This techbology isn’t fresh, over a decade old if anything. They demonstrated this in the movie, ‘Gone in sixty Seconds’.

Device is available on aliexpress from china for $600 or less. Clones key fobs and can transmit them. It’s not a mystery.

Thats not how they work. You need access to the original keys and the car to make a clone.

Most people keep their registration and garage door opener in their car. If a thief witnesses you leave your vehicle in a parking lot and can access your car this way, he can go to your home and rob it while you’re shopping or standing in the parking lot wondering where your car is.

Dan Darius

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

It’s a shame that cops are always reactive instead of proactive.

Dan Darius
Dee Ouchman

It’s a plain Tesla coil which energised the door lock/unlock servo.

Justa Joe

I don’t need a fresh car that badly. My two thousand five Ford Concentrate has manual (mechanical) doorlocks, manual (palm crank) windows, and a 5-speed manual transmission. Its also carrying 275,000 miles on the odometer.

I’m in no fear of anyone attempting to steal my wheels.

Marc M

Yes, we have the exact same car – two thousand five Ford Concentrate. Looks like a ruddy ordnance vehicle, but I like it because it has NOTHING (except AC). Manual trans, windows, everything. And a freakin’ metal key. I do not like this fresh crap. “The more the over-think the plumbing, the lighter it is to stop up the drain,” in the words of Scotty. And every excursion to the stealership to fix the over-thought under-engineered geek fucktoys is an exercise on your wallet.

This is finish rubbish. The rolling code protocol (keyloq) used by keyless entry will only permit two hundred fifty six code attempts before the original key will need to be reset. This is a hoax.

George Johnson

Evidently the cops are NOT one step ahead of the criminals.

Starheart

There are too many COPS that ARE the CRIMINALS OUT THERE.

pithypaul

The thief is going to sue for invasion of his own privacy, as nobody asked him for permission to use his picture. Hey, this is Amerika.

SMARTERTHANYOU

Wow.. these reporters, especially the police department, are frankly imbeciles! The technology is over a decade old, it’s called a laptop and a receiver.

Starheart

Homeland Security Personnel are using very advanced electronic technology to hack into everything now.

People like Kay Griggs, Michael Hastings, Phillip Marshall, Judi Bari and myself have been targeted by some of these these special ops Homeland Security personnel involved in criminal operations in the US. They have been promoting and rewarding war criminals for years from the CIA and Military Black Sites and Torment Facilities, into Homeland Security, FBI, Law Enforcement, and other government agencies across the country, to target citizens for surveillance and crimes.

(Witness Kay Griggs movies on you tube, as she gives her testimonial for what has been going on for a long time now.)

Since 2011, I’ve been targeted for surveillance burglaries, vandalism, pet torment, vehicle tampering as well as the planting of stolen and unknown origin property and malicious prosecution. My safe deposit box in, Colville, WA ,was even burglarized. I can’t find any organization to help me, out of the dozens and dozens of civil and constitutional rights organizations and attorneys I’ve contacted. I had to get a private investigator to trace license plates and find out who some of the people involved in these targeted black operations are.

I can’t get my FOIA Requests fulfilled for information on my surveillance “Watch List” targeted crimes and it’s even common skill in Washington state that Homeland Security personnel are involved in my targeted surveillance and gang stalking crimes. There has even been one out of court settlement in one case in the Seattle area for these criminal activities by Homeland Security Personnel.

My cruise control stopped working on my one hundred forty mile tour back from Spokane WA, on Thursday February 26th (about two weeks ago), and I was gang stalked on the road by numerous vehicles (one of them with a Big Transformer Decal on the Back Window, one with a Big US “Infantry” sticker on his back window, as well as by WA license plate # WEPLAY2) and after they all turned off and I got past Colville, WA, I attempted my cruise control again and it began working. I know they have had remote control over my car alarms on my vehicles for a long time now, and it looks to me that they can also remote control my cruise control as well now……

They have been using FOIA DENIALS, FOIA APPEAL DENIALS, GAG ORDERS, NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS AND EVEN – “CLASSIFYING” INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COVER UP THEIR CRIMES AGAINST TARGETED INDIVIDUALS, ACTIVISTS AND JOURNALISTS.

See: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car, Q13 FOX News

Witness: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car

SEATTLE — A West Seattle man is sharing a surveillance movie that shows the panicking way thieves are using technology to break into cars.

Witness the movie as a man approaches Tom Dahl’s truck in this driveway. He attempts the treat, but the door is locked. So he takes off his backpack, moves it close to the window. Seconds later, he’s able to get inwards.

Photo Gallery

“He opens the door up,” says Dahl. “The lights went on, it was disarmed.”

Dahl is glad the thief didn’t take his truck. All he did was rummage through the contents of his glove compartment.

“I was brainy enough not to carry anything of value in there. That’s what he was looking for.”

But Dahl is worried about how the thief got in so lightly.

“You used to have a wire that you glided down the window, when it was mechanical. But now it’s electronic.”

Cases like this are becoming more common across the region.

Lars Carlson says the man who broke into his car in January also appeared to be carrying something in a backpack.

“It’s running through codes automatically or it’s a button they’re pushing or something is happening. But whatever it does, it seems to trick the car into thinking he’s got the legitimate keys.”

Seattle police say they don’t know exactly what kind of device thieves are using, or how it works. But they are worried.

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

Dahl says automakers need to do something to give people a little more security. But until that happens, he’s going to share this movie with as many neighbors as he can.

“I hope other people pay attention, make sure things are secure and locked, and don’t keep things in your car that are of any value.”

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

thirty two comments

Slam1263 (@IKnowBO)

It is just a random code transmitter.

They can transmit a million codes with the shove of a button.

Tow truck driver have been using them for over twenty years.

Don’t the receivers limit the number of failed attempts per 2nd?

Sadly No they don’t

Rodger Wolkins

They need to emit a cloud of pepper splatter after three failed attempts.

Fresh Dude

Then cars in parking lots would permanently be admitting pepper unload, in a parking lot hundreds of remote keys are used permanently, so it has to be able to see signals without assuming it is failed attempts. They need to increase the complexity of the codes, add more bits, make it too hard to crack.

ashford
lionfan

Can most likely take the entire damn car if it uses keyless ignition, right?

Testicules

For most cars, the thief would still have to deal with the mechanical steering lock that is released by the mechanical portion of the key.

As for some cars that now have keyless shove button commence features… ?

clovellstc

The car permanently scans for the key. Since this is very likely just a device and sends out a bunch of signals in a row he wouldn’t know which one was for the car, so I doubt it would work on the ignition.

Phillip Coiner

I know how they are doing it. Have the cops send me an e-mail

john Bowler

Witness a classic Forrest Whitaker film “Ghost Dog”. The hero uses one of those code generators to steal luxury cars.

So, They may steal them from Tow Truck Drivers?

Tester

The device works by “pinging” the FOB on the key chain which, in turn, generates a signal to the vehicle. The device only works when the keys are within operational range of the vehicle.

Frank

This techbology isn’t fresh, over a decade old if anything. They demonstrated this in the movie, ‘Gone in sixty Seconds’.

Device is available on aliexpress from china for $600 or less. Clones key fobs and can transmit them. It’s not a mystery.

Thats not how they work. You need access to the original keys and the car to make a clone.

Most people keep their registration and garage door opener in their car. If a thief observes you leave your vehicle in a parking lot and can access your car this way, he can go to your home and rob it while you’re shopping or standing in the parking lot wondering where your car is.

Dan Darius

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

It’s a shame that cops are always reactive instead of proactive.

Dan Darius
Dee Ouchman

It’s a elementary Tesla coil which energised the door lock/unlock servo.

Justa Joe

I don’t need a fresh car that badly. My two thousand five Ford Concentrate has manual (mechanical) doorlocks, manual (arm crank) windows, and a 5-speed manual transmission. Its also carrying 275,000 miles on the odometer.

I’m in no fear of anyone attempting to steal my wheels.

Marc M

Yes, we have the exact same car – two thousand five Ford Concentrate. Looks like a ruddy ordnance vehicle, but I like it because it has NOTHING (except AC). Manual trans, windows, everything. And a freakin’ metal key. I do not like this fresh crap. “The more the over-think the plumbing, the lighter it is to stop up the drain,” in the words of Scotty. And every journey to the stealership to fix the over-thought under-engineered geek fucktoys is an exercise on your wallet.

This is accomplish rubbish. The rolling code protocol (keyloq) used by keyless entry will only permit two hundred fifty six code attempts before the original key will need to be reset. This is a hoax.

George Johnson

Evidently the cops are NOT one step ahead of the criminals.

Starheart

There are too many COPS that ARE the CRIMINALS OUT THERE.

pithypaul

The thief is going to sue for invasion of his own privacy, as nobody asked him for permission to use his picture. Hey, this is Amerika.

SMARTERTHANYOU

Wow.. these reporters, especially the police department, are frankly imbeciles! The technology is over a decade old, it’s called a laptop and a receiver.

Starheart

Homeland Security Personnel are using very advanced electronic technology to hack into everything now.

People like Kay Griggs, Michael Hastings, Phillip Marshall, Judi Bari and myself have been targeted by some of these these special ops Homeland Security personnel involved in criminal operations in the US. They have been promoting and rewarding war criminals for years from the CIA and Military Black Sites and Torment Facilities, into Homeland Security, FBI, Law Enforcement, and other government agencies across the country, to target citizens for surveillance and crimes.

(See Kay Griggs movies on you tube, as she gives her testimonial for what has been going on for a long time now.)

Since 2011, I’ve been targeted for surveillance burglaries, vandalism, pet torment, vehicle tampering as well as the planting of stolen and unknown origin property and malicious prosecution. My safe deposit box in, Colville, WA ,was even burglarized. I can’t find any organization to help me, out of the dozens and dozens of civil and constitutional rights organizations and attorneys I’ve contacted. I had to get a private investigator to trace license plates and find out who some of the people involved in these targeted black operations are.

I can’t get my FOIA Requests fulfilled for information on my surveillance “Watch List” targeted crimes and it’s even common skill in Washington state that Homeland Security personnel are involved in my targeted surveillance and gang stalking crimes. There has even been one out of court settlement in one case in the Seattle area for these criminal activities by Homeland Security Personnel.

My cruise control stopped working on my one hundred forty mile tour back from Spokane WA, on Thursday February 26th (about two weeks ago), and I was gang stalked on the road by numerous vehicles (one of them with a Big Transformer Decal on the Back Window, one with a Big US “Infantry” sticker on his back window, as well as by WA license plate # WEPLAY2) and after they all turned off and I got past Colville, WA, I attempted my cruise control again and it began working. I know they have had remote control over my car alarms on my vehicles for a long time now, and it looks to me that they can also remote control my cruise control as well now……

They have been using FOIA DENIALS, FOIA APPEAL DENIALS, GAG ORDERS, NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS AND EVEN – “CLASSIFYING” INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COVER UP THEIR CRIMES AGAINST TARGETED INDIVIDUALS, ACTIVISTS AND JOURNALISTS.

See: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car, Q13 FOX News

Observe: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car

SEATTLE — A West Seattle man is sharing a surveillance movie that shows the scaring way thieves are using technology to break into cars.

Witness the movie as a man approaches Tom Dahl’s truck in this driveway. He attempts the treat, but the door is locked. So he takes off his backpack, moves it close to the window. Seconds later, he’s able to get inwards.

Photo Gallery

“He opens the door up,” says Dahl. “The lights went on, it was disarmed.”

Dahl is glad the thief didn’t take his truck. All he did was rummage through the contents of his glove compartment.

“I was clever enough not to carry anything of value in there. That’s what he was looking for.”

But Dahl is worried about how the thief got in so lightly.

“You used to have a wire that you glided down the window, when it was mechanical. But now it’s electronic.”

Cases like this are becoming more common across the region.

Lars Carlson says the man who broke into his car in January also appeared to be carrying something in a backpack.

“It’s running through codes automatically or it’s a button they’re pushing or something is happening. But whatever it does, it seems to trick the car into thinking he’s got the legitimate keys.”

Seattle police say they don’t know exactly what kind of device thieves are using, or how it works. But they are worried.

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

Dahl says automakers need to do something to give people a little more security. But until that happens, he’s going to share this movie with as many neighbors as he can.

“I hope other people pay attention, make sure things are secure and locked, and don’t keep things in your car that are of any value.”

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

thirty two comments

Slam1263 (@IKnowBO)

It is just a random code transmitter.

They can transmit a million codes with the shove of a button.

Tow truck driver have been using them for over twenty years.

Don’t the receivers limit the number of failed attempts per 2nd?

Sadly No they don’t

Rodger Wolkins

They need to emit a cloud of pepper dump after three failed attempts.

Fresh Man

Then cars in parking lots would permanently be admitting pepper bust, in a parking lot hundreds of remote keys are used permanently, so it has to be able to see signals without assuming it is failed attempts. They need to increase the complexity of the codes, add more bits, make it too hard to crack.

ashford
lionfan

Can most likely take the entire damn car if it uses keyless ignition, right?

Testicules

For most cars, the thief would still have to deal with the mechanical steering lock that is released by the mechanical portion of the key.

As for some cars that now have keyless shove button commence features… ?

clovellstc

The car permanently scans for the key. Since this is very likely just a device and sends out a bunch of signals in a row he wouldn’t know which one was for the car, so I doubt it would work on the ignition.

Phillip Coiner

I know how they are doing it. Have the cops send me an e-mail

john Bowler

Observe a classic Forrest Whitaker film “Ghost Dog”. The hero uses one of those code generators to steal luxury cars.

So, They may steal them from Tow Truck Drivers?

Tester

The device works by “pinging” the FOB on the key chain which, in turn, generates a signal to the vehicle. The device only works when the keys are within operational range of the vehicle.

Frank

This techbology isn’t fresh, over a decade old if anything. They demonstrated this in the movie, ‘Gone in sixty Seconds’.

Device is available on aliexpress from china for $600 or less. Clones key fobs and can transmit them. It’s not a mystery.

Thats not how they work. You need access to the original keys and the car to make a clone.

Most people keep their registration and garage door opener in their car. If a thief observes you leave your vehicle in a parking lot and can access your car this way, he can go to your home and rob it while you’re shopping or standing in the parking lot wondering where your car is.

Dan Darius

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

It’s a shame that cops are always reactive instead of proactive.

Dan Darius
Dee Ouchman

It’s a plain Tesla coil which energised the door lock/unlock servo.

Justa Joe

I don’t need a fresh car that badly. My two thousand five Ford Concentrate has manual (mechanical) doorlocks, manual (mitt crank) windows, and a 5-speed manual transmission. Its also carrying 275,000 miles on the odometer.

I’m in no fear of anyone attempting to steal my wheels.

Marc M

Yes, we have the exact same car – two thousand five Ford Concentrate. Looks like a ruddy ordnance vehicle, but I like it because it has NOTHING (except AC). Manual trans, windows, everything. And a freakin’ metal key. I do not like this fresh crap. “The more the over-think the plumbing, the lighter it is to stop up the drain,” in the words of Scotty. And every journey to the stealership to fix the over-thought under-engineered geek fucktoys is an exercise on your wallet.

This is accomplish rubbish. The rolling code protocol (keyloq) used by keyless entry will only permit two hundred fifty six code attempts before the original key will need to be reset. This is a hoax.

George Johnson

Evidently the cops are NOT one step ahead of the criminals.

Starheart

There are too many COPS that ARE the CRIMINALS OUT THERE.

pithypaul

The thief is going to sue for invasion of his own privacy, as nobody asked him for permission to use his picture. Hey, this is Amerika.

SMARTERTHANYOU

Wow.. these reporters, especially the police department, are frankly imbeciles! The technology is over a decade old, it’s called a laptop and a receiver.

Starheart

Homeland Security Personnel are using very advanced electronic technology to hack into everything now.

People like Kay Griggs, Michael Hastings, Phillip Marshall, Judi Bari and myself have been targeted by some of these these special ops Homeland Security personnel involved in criminal operations in the US. They have been promoting and rewarding war criminals for years from the CIA and Military Black Sites and Torment Facilities, into Homeland Security, FBI, Law Enforcement, and other government agencies across the country, to target citizens for surveillance and crimes.

(Witness Kay Griggs movies on you tube, as she gives her testimonial for what has been going on for a long time now.)

Since 2011, I’ve been targeted for surveillance burglaries, vandalism, pet torment, vehicle tampering as well as the planting of stolen and unknown origin property and malicious prosecution. My safe deposit box in, Colville, WA ,was even burglarized. I can’t find any organization to help me, out of the dozens and dozens of civil and constitutional rights organizations and attorneys I’ve contacted. I had to get a private investigator to trace license plates and find out who some of the people involved in these targeted black operations are.

I can’t get my FOIA Requests fulfilled for information on my surveillance “Watch List” targeted crimes and it’s even common skill in Washington state that Homeland Security personnel are involved in my targeted surveillance and gang stalking crimes. There has even been one out of court settlement in one case in the Seattle area for these criminal activities by Homeland Security Personnel.

My cruise control stopped working on my one hundred forty mile excursion back from Spokane WA, on Thursday February 26th (about two weeks ago), and I was gang stalked on the road by numerous vehicles (one of them with a Big Transformer Decal on the Back Window, one with a Big US “Infantry” sticker on his back window, as well as by WA license plate # WEPLAY2) and after they all turned off and I got past Colville, WA, I attempted my cruise control again and it embarked working. I know they have had remote control over my car alarms on my vehicles for a long time now, and it looks to me that they can also remote control my cruise control as well now……

They have been using FOIA DENIALS, FOIA APPEAL DENIALS, GAG ORDERS, NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS AND EVEN – “CLASSIFYING” INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COVER UP THEIR CRIMES AGAINST TARGETED INDIVIDUALS, ACTIVISTS AND JOURNALISTS.

Observe: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car, Q13 FOX News

See: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car

SEATTLE — A West Seattle man is sharing a surveillance movie that shows the panicking way thieves are using technology to break into cars.

Observe the movie as a man approaches Tom Dahl’s truck in this driveway. He attempts the treat, but the door is locked. So he takes off his backpack, moves it close to the window. Seconds later, he’s able to get inwards.

Photo Gallery

“He opens the door up,” says Dahl. “The lights went on, it was disarmed.”

Dahl is glad the thief didn’t take his truck. All he did was rummage through the contents of his glove compartment.

“I was brainy enough not to carry anything of value in there. That’s what he was looking for.”

But Dahl is worried about how the thief got in so lightly.

“You used to have a wire that you glided down the window, when it was mechanical. But now it’s electronic.”

Cases like this are becoming more common across the region.

Lars Carlson says the man who broke into his car in January also appeared to be carrying something in a backpack.

“It’s running through codes automatically or it’s a button they’re pushing or something is happening. But whatever it does, it seems to trick the car into thinking he’s got the legitimate keys.”

Seattle police say they don’t know exactly what kind of device thieves are using, or how it works. But they are worried.

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

Dahl says automakers need to do something to give people a little more security. But until that happens, he’s going to share this movie with as many neighbors as he can.

“I hope other people pay attention, make sure things are secure and locked, and don’t keep things in your car that are of any value.”

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

thirty two comments

Slam1263 (@IKnowBO)

It is just a random code transmitter.

They can transmit a million codes with the shove of a button.

Tow truck driver have been using them for over twenty years.

Don’t the receivers limit the number of failed attempts per 2nd?

Sadly No they don’t

Rodger Wolkins

They need to emit a cloud of pepper unload after three failed attempts.

Fresh Dude

Then cars in parking lots would permanently be admitting pepper squirt, in a parking lot hundreds of remote keys are used permanently, so it has to be able to see signals without assuming it is failed attempts. They need to increase the complexity of the codes, add more bits, make it too hard to crack.

ashford
lionfan

Can most likely take the entire damn car if it uses keyless ignition, right?

Testicules

For most cars, the thief would still have to deal with the mechanical steering lock that is released by the mechanical portion of the key.

As for some cars that now have keyless shove button embark features… ?

clovellstc

The car permanently scans for the key. Since this is most likely just a device and sends out a bunch of signals in a row he wouldn’t know which one was for the car, so I doubt it would work on the ignition.

Phillip Coiner

I know how they are doing it. Have the cops send me an e-mail

john Bowler

Witness a classic Forrest Whitaker film “Ghost Dog”. The hero uses one of those code generators to steal luxury cars.

So, They may steal them from Tow Truck Drivers?

Tester

The device works by “pinging” the FOB on the key chain which, in turn, generates a signal to the vehicle. The device only works when the keys are within operational range of the vehicle.

Frank

This techbology isn’t fresh, over a decade old if anything. They demonstrated this in the movie, ‘Gone in sixty Seconds’.

Device is available on aliexpress from china for $600 or less. Clones key fobs and can transmit them. It’s not a mystery.

Thats not how they work. You need access to the original keys and the car to make a clone.

Most people keep their registration and garage door opener in their car. If a thief observes you leave your vehicle in a parking lot and can access your car this way, he can go to your home and rob it while you’re shopping or standing in the parking lot wondering where your car is.

Dan Darius

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

It’s a shame that cops are always reactive instead of proactive.

Dan Darius
Dee Ouchman

It’s a elementary Tesla coil which energised the door lock/unlock servo.

Justa Joe

I don’t need a fresh car that badly. My two thousand five Ford Concentrate has manual (mechanical) doorlocks, manual (mitt crank) windows, and a 5-speed manual transmission. Its also carrying 275,000 miles on the odometer.

I’m in no fear of anyone attempting to steal my wheels.

Marc M

Yes, we have the exact same car – two thousand five Ford Concentrate. Looks like a ruddy ordnance vehicle, but I like it because it has NOTHING (except AC). Manual trans, windows, everything. And a freakin’ metal key. I do not like this fresh crap. “The more the over-think the plumbing, the lighter it is to stop up the drain,” in the words of Scotty. And every tour to the stealership to fix the over-thought under-engineered geek fucktoys is an exercise on your wallet.

This is accomplish rubbish. The rolling code protocol (keyloq) used by keyless entry will only permit two hundred fifty six code attempts before the original key will need to be reset. This is a hoax.

George Johnson

Evidently the cops are NOT one step ahead of the criminals.

Starheart

There are too many COPS that ARE the CRIMINALS OUT THERE.

pithypaul

The thief is going to sue for invasion of his own privacy, as nobody asked him for permission to use his photo. Hey, this is Amerika.

SMARTERTHANYOU

Wow.. these reporters, especially the police department, are frankly imbeciles! The technology is over a decade old, it’s called a laptop and a receiver.

Starheart

Homeland Security Personnel are using very advanced electronic technology to hack into everything now.

People like Kay Griggs, Michael Hastings, Phillip Marshall, Judi Bari and myself have been targeted by some of these these special ops Homeland Security personnel involved in criminal operations in the US. They have been promoting and rewarding war criminals for years from the CIA and Military Black Sites and Torment Facilities, into Homeland Security, FBI, Law Enforcement, and other government agencies across the country, to target citizens for surveillance and crimes.

(Observe Kay Griggs movies on you tube, as she gives her testimonial for what has been going on for a long time now.)

Since 2011, I’ve been targeted for surveillance burglaries, vandalism, pet torment, vehicle tampering as well as the planting of stolen and unknown origin property and malicious prosecution. My safe deposit box in, Colville, WA ,was even burglarized. I can’t find any organization to help me, out of the dozens and dozens of civil and constitutional rights organizations and attorneys I’ve contacted. I had to get a private investigator to trace license plates and find out who some of the people involved in these targeted black operations are.

I can’t get my FOIA Requests fulfilled for information on my surveillance “Watch List” targeted crimes and it’s even common skill in Washington state that Homeland Security personnel are involved in my targeted surveillance and gang stalking crimes. There has even been one out of court settlement in one case in the Seattle area for these criminal activities by Homeland Security Personnel.

My cruise control stopped working on my one hundred forty mile journey back from Spokane WA, on Thursday February 26th (about two weeks ago), and I was gang stalked on the road by numerous vehicles (one of them with a Big Transformer Decal on the Back Window, one with a Big US “Infantry” sticker on his back window, as well as by WA license plate # WEPLAY2) and after they all turned off and I got past Colville, WA, I attempted my cruise control again and it began working. I know they have had remote control over my car alarms on my vehicles for a long time now, and it looks to me that they can also remote control my cruise control as well now……

They have been using FOIA DENIALS, FOIA APPEAL DENIALS, GAG ORDERS, NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS AND EVEN – “CLASSIFYING” INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COVER UP THEIR CRIMES AGAINST TARGETED INDIVIDUALS, ACTIVISTS AND JOURNALISTS.

Witness: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car, Q13 FOX News

Witness: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car

SEATTLE — A West Seattle man is sharing a surveillance movie that shows the panicking way thieves are using technology to break into cars.

Observe the movie as a man approaches Tom Dahl’s truck in this driveway. He attempts the treat, but the door is locked. So he takes off his backpack, moves it close to the window. Seconds later, he’s able to get inwards.

Photo Gallery

“He opens the door up,” says Dahl. “The lights went on, it was disarmed.”

Dahl is glad the thief didn’t take his truck. All he did was rummage through the contents of his glove compartment.

“I was wise enough not to carry anything of value in there. That’s what he was looking for.”

But Dahl is worried about how the thief got in so lightly.

“You used to have a wire that you slipped down the window, when it was mechanical. But now it’s electronic.”

Cases like this are becoming more common across the region.

Lars Carlson says the man who broke into his car in January also appeared to be carrying something in a backpack.

“It’s running through codes automatically or it’s a button they’re pushing or something is happening. But whatever it does, it seems to trick the car into thinking he’s got the legitimate keys.”

Seattle police say they don’t know exactly what kind of device thieves are using, or how it works. But they are worried.

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

Dahl says automakers need to do something to give people a little more security. But until that happens, he’s going to share this movie with as many neighbors as he can.

“I hope other people pay attention, make sure things are secure and locked, and don’t keep things in your car that are of any value.”

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

thirty two comments

Slam1263 (@IKnowBO)

It is just a random code transmitter.

They can transmit a million codes with the thrust of a button.

Tow truck driver have been using them for over twenty years.

Don’t the receivers limit the number of failed attempts per 2nd?

Sadly No they don’t

Rodger Wolkins

They need to emit a cloud of pepper drizzle after three failed attempts.

Fresh Boy

Then cars in parking lots would permanently be admitting pepper burst, in a parking lot hundreds of remote keys are used permanently, so it has to be able to see signals without assuming it is failed attempts. They need to increase the complexity of the codes, add more bits, make it too hard to crack.

ashford
lionfan

Can very likely take the entire damn car if it uses keyless ignition, right?

Testicules

For most cars, the thief would still have to deal with the mechanical steering lock that is released by the mechanical portion of the key.

As for some cars that now have keyless thrust button commence features… ?

clovellstc

The car permanently scans for the key. Since this is most likely just a device and sends out a bunch of signals in a row he wouldn’t know which one was for the car, so I doubt it would work on the ignition.

Phillip Coiner

I know how they are doing it. Have the cops send me an e-mail

john Bowler

Witness a classic Forrest Whitaker film “Ghost Dog”. The hero uses one of those code generators to steal luxury cars.

So, They may steal them from Tow Truck Drivers?

Tester

The device works by “pinging” the FOB on the key chain which, in turn, generates a signal to the vehicle. The device only works when the keys are within operational range of the vehicle.

Frank

This techbology isn’t fresh, over a decade old if anything. They demonstrated this in the movie, ‘Gone in sixty Seconds’.

Device is available on aliexpress from china for $600 or less. Clones key fobs and can transmit them. It’s not a mystery.

Thats not how they work. You need access to the original keys and the car to make a clone.

Most people keep their registration and garage door opener in their car. If a thief witnesses you leave your vehicle in a parking lot and can access your car this way, he can go to your home and rob it while you’re shopping or standing in the parking lot wondering where your car is.

Dan Darius

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

It’s a shame that cops are always reactive instead of proactive.

Dan Darius
Dee Ouchman

It’s a elementary Tesla coil which energised the door lock/unlock servo.

Justa Joe

I don’t need a fresh car that badly. My two thousand five Ford Concentrate has manual (mechanical) doorlocks, manual (arm crank) windows, and a 5-speed manual transmission. Its also carrying 275,000 miles on the odometer.

I’m in no fear of anyone attempting to steal my wheels.

Marc M

Yes, we have the exact same car – two thousand five Ford Concentrate. Looks like a ruddy ordnance vehicle, but I like it because it has NOTHING (except AC). Manual trans, windows, everything. And a freakin’ metal key. I do not like this fresh crap. “The more the over-think the plumbing, the lighter it is to stop up the drain,” in the words of Scotty. And every excursion to the stealership to fix the over-thought under-engineered geek fucktoys is an exercise on your wallet.

This is accomplish rubbish. The rolling code protocol (keyloq) used by keyless entry will only permit two hundred fifty six code attempts before the original key will need to be reset. This is a hoax.

George Johnson

Evidently the cops are NOT one step ahead of the criminals.

Starheart

There are too many COPS that ARE the CRIMINALS OUT THERE.

pithypaul

The thief is going to sue for invasion of his own privacy, as nobody asked him for permission to use his photo. Hey, this is Amerika.

SMARTERTHANYOU

Wow.. these reporters, especially the police department, are frankly imbeciles! The technology is over a decade old, it’s called a laptop and a receiver.

Starheart

Homeland Security Personnel are using very advanced electronic technology to hack into everything now.

People like Kay Griggs, Michael Hastings, Phillip Marshall, Judi Bari and myself have been targeted by some of these these special ops Homeland Security personnel involved in criminal operations in the US. They have been promoting and rewarding war criminals for years from the CIA and Military Black Sites and Torment Facilities, into Homeland Security, FBI, Law Enforcement, and other government agencies across the country, to target citizens for surveillance and crimes.

(Observe Kay Griggs movies on you tube, as she gives her testimonial for what has been going on for a long time now.)

Since 2011, I’ve been targeted for surveillance burglaries, vandalism, pet torment, vehicle tampering as well as the planting of stolen and unknown origin property and malicious prosecution. My safe deposit box in, Colville, WA ,was even burglarized. I can’t find any organization to help me, out of the dozens and dozens of civil and constitutional rights organizations and attorneys I’ve contacted. I had to get a private investigator to trace license plates and find out who some of the people involved in these targeted black operations are.

I can’t get my FOIA Requests fulfilled for information on my surveillance “Watch List” targeted crimes and it’s even common skill in Washington state that Homeland Security personnel are involved in my targeted surveillance and gang stalking crimes. There has even been one out of court settlement in one case in the Seattle area for these criminal activities by Homeland Security Personnel.

My cruise control stopped working on my one hundred forty mile tour back from Spokane WA, on Thursday February 26th (about two weeks ago), and I was gang stalked on the road by numerous vehicles (one of them with a Big Transformer Decal on the Back Window, one with a Big US “Infantry” sticker on his back window, as well as by WA license plate # WEPLAY2) and after they all turned off and I got past Colville, WA, I attempted my cruise control again and it commenced working. I know they have had remote control over my car alarms on my vehicles for a long time now, and it looks to me that they can also remote control my cruise control as well now……

They have been using FOIA DENIALS, FOIA APPEAL DENIALS, GAG ORDERS, NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS AND EVEN – “CLASSIFYING” INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COVER UP THEIR CRIMES AGAINST TARGETED INDIVIDUALS, ACTIVISTS AND JOURNALISTS.

See: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car, Q13 FOX News

See: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car

SEATTLE — A West Seattle man is sharing a surveillance movie that shows the scaring way thieves are using technology to break into cars.

See the movie as a man approaches Tom Dahl’s truck in this driveway. He attempts the treat, but the door is locked. So he takes off his backpack, moves it close to the window. Seconds later, he’s able to get inwards.

Photo Gallery

“He opens the door up,” says Dahl. “The lights went on, it was disarmed.”

Dahl is glad the thief didn’t take his truck. All he did was rummage through the contents of his glove compartment.

“I was brainy enough not to carry anything of value in there. That’s what he was looking for.”

But Dahl is worried about how the thief got in so lightly.

“You used to have a wire that you slipped down the window, when it was mechanical. But now it’s electronic.”

Cases like this are becoming more common across the region.

Lars Carlson says the man who broke into his car in January also appeared to be carrying something in a backpack.

“It’s running through codes automatically or it’s a button they’re pushing or something is happening. But whatever it does, it seems to trick the car into thinking he’s got the legitimate keys.”

Seattle police say they don’t know exactly what kind of device thieves are using, or how it works. But they are worried.

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

Dahl says automakers need to do something to give people a little more security. But until that happens, he’s going to share this movie with as many neighbors as he can.

“I hope other people pay attention, make sure things are secure and locked, and don’t keep things in your car that are of any value.”

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

thirty two comments

Slam1263 (@IKnowBO)

It is just a random code transmitter.

They can transmit a million codes with the thrust of a button.

Tow truck driver have been using them for over twenty years.

Don’t the receivers limit the number of failed attempts per 2nd?

Sadly No they don’t

Rodger Wolkins

They need to emit a cloud of pepper dump after three failed attempts.

Fresh Man

Then cars in parking lots would permanently be admitting pepper unload, in a parking lot hundreds of remote keys are used permanently, so it has to be able to see signals without assuming it is failed attempts. They need to increase the complexity of the codes, add more bits, make it too hard to crack.

ashford
lionfan

Can most likely take the entire damn car if it uses keyless ignition, right?

Testicules

For most cars, the thief would still have to deal with the mechanical steering lock that is released by the mechanical portion of the key.

As for some cars that now have keyless shove button embark features… ?

clovellstc

The car permanently scans for the key. Since this is very likely just a device and sends out a bunch of signals in a row he wouldn’t know which one was for the car, so I doubt it would work on the ignition.

Phillip Coiner

I know how they are doing it. Have the cops send me an e-mail

john Bowler

Witness a classic Forrest Whitaker film “Ghost Dog”. The hero uses one of those code generators to steal luxury cars.

So, They may steal them from Tow Truck Drivers?

Tester

The device works by “pinging” the FOB on the key chain which, in turn, generates a signal to the vehicle. The device only works when the keys are within operational range of the vehicle.

Frank

This techbology isn’t fresh, over a decade old if anything. They demonstrated this in the movie, ‘Gone in sixty Seconds’.

Device is available on aliexpress from china for $600 or less. Clones key fobs and can transmit them. It’s not a mystery.

Thats not how they work. You need access to the original keys and the car to make a clone.

Most people keep their registration and garage door opener in their car. If a thief observes you leave your vehicle in a parking lot and can access your car this way, he can go to your home and rob it while you’re shopping or standing in the parking lot wondering where your car is.

Dan Darius

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

It’s a shame that cops are always reactive instead of proactive.

Dan Darius
Dee Ouchman

It’s a ordinary Tesla coil which energised the door lock/unlock servo.

Justa Joe

I don’t need a fresh car that badly. My two thousand five Ford Concentrate has manual (mechanical) doorlocks, manual (palm crank) windows, and a 5-speed manual transmission. Its also carrying 275,000 miles on the odometer.

I’m in no fear of anyone attempting to steal my wheels.

Marc M

Yes, we have the exact same car – two thousand five Ford Concentrate. Looks like a ruddy ordnance vehicle, but I like it because it has NOTHING (except AC). Manual trans, windows, everything. And a freakin’ metal key. I do not like this fresh crap. “The more the over-think the plumbing, the lighter it is to stop up the drain,” in the words of Scotty. And every tour to the stealership to fix the over-thought under-engineered geek fucktoys is an exercise on your wallet.

This is accomplish rubbish. The rolling code protocol (keyloq) used by keyless entry will only permit two hundred fifty six code attempts before the original key will need to be reset. This is a hoax.

George Johnson

Evidently the cops are NOT one step ahead of the criminals.

Starheart

There are too many COPS that ARE the CRIMINALS OUT THERE.

pithypaul

The thief is going to sue for invasion of his own privacy, as nobody asked him for permission to use his photo. Hey, this is Amerika.

SMARTERTHANYOU

Wow.. these reporters, especially the police department, are frankly imbeciles! The technology is over a decade old, it’s called a laptop and a receiver.

Starheart

Homeland Security Personnel are using very advanced electronic technology to hack into everything now.

People like Kay Griggs, Michael Hastings, Phillip Marshall, Judi Bari and myself have been targeted by some of these these special ops Homeland Security personnel involved in criminal operations in the US. They have been promoting and rewarding war criminals for years from the CIA and Military Black Sites and Torment Facilities, into Homeland Security, FBI, Law Enforcement, and other government agencies across the country, to target citizens for surveillance and crimes.

(See Kay Griggs movies on you tube, as she gives her testimonial for what has been going on for a long time now.)

Since 2011, I’ve been targeted for surveillance burglaries, vandalism, pet torment, vehicle tampering as well as the planting of stolen and unknown origin property and malicious prosecution. My safe deposit box in, Colville, WA ,was even burglarized. I can’t find any organization to help me, out of the dozens and dozens of civil and constitutional rights organizations and attorneys I’ve contacted. I had to get a private investigator to trace license plates and find out who some of the people involved in these targeted black operations are.

I can’t get my FOIA Requests fulfilled for information on my surveillance “Watch List” targeted crimes and it’s even common skill in Washington state that Homeland Security personnel are involved in my targeted surveillance and gang stalking crimes. There has even been one out of court settlement in one case in the Seattle area for these criminal activities by Homeland Security Personnel.

My cruise control stopped working on my one hundred forty mile excursion back from Spokane WA, on Thursday February 26th (about two weeks ago), and I was gang stalked on the road by numerous vehicles (one of them with a Big Transformer Decal on the Back Window, one with a Big US “Infantry” sticker on his back window, as well as by WA license plate # WEPLAY2) and after they all turned off and I got past Colville, WA, I attempted my cruise control again and it embarked working. I know they have had remote control over my car alarms on my vehicles for a long time now, and it looks to me that they can also remote control my cruise control as well now……

They have been using FOIA DENIALS, FOIA APPEAL DENIALS, GAG ORDERS, NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS AND EVEN – “CLASSIFYING” INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COVER UP THEIR CRIMES AGAINST TARGETED INDIVIDUALS, ACTIVISTS AND JOURNALISTS.

Witness: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car, Q13 FOX News

Witness: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car

SEATTLE — A West Seattle man is sharing a surveillance movie that shows the scaring way thieves are using technology to break into cars.

See the movie as a man approaches Tom Dahl’s truck in this driveway. He attempts the treat, but the door is locked. So he takes off his backpack, moves it close to the window. Seconds later, he’s able to get inwards.

Photo Gallery

“He opens the door up,” says Dahl. “The lights went on, it was disarmed.”

Dahl is glad the thief didn’t take his truck. All he did was rummage through the contents of his glove compartment.

“I was brainy enough not to carry anything of value in there. That’s what he was looking for.”

But Dahl is worried about how the thief got in so lightly.

“You used to have a wire that you glided down the window, when it was mechanical. But now it’s electronic.”

Cases like this are becoming more common across the region.

Lars Carlson says the man who broke into his car in January also appeared to be carrying something in a backpack.

“It’s running through codes automatically or it’s a button they’re pushing or something is happening. But whatever it does, it seems to trick the car into thinking he’s got the legitimate keys.”

Seattle police say they don’t know exactly what kind of device thieves are using, or how it works. But they are worried.

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

Dahl says automakers need to do something to give people a little more security. But until that happens, he’s going to share this movie with as many neighbors as he can.

“I hope other people pay attention, make sure things are secure and locked, and don’t keep things in your car that are of any value.”

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

thirty two comments

Slam1263 (@IKnowBO)

It is just a random code transmitter.

They can transmit a million codes with the shove of a button.

Tow truck driver have been using them for over twenty years.

Don’t the receivers limit the number of failed attempts per 2nd?

Sadly No they don’t

Rodger Wolkins

They need to emit a cloud of pepper squirt after three failed attempts.

Fresh Boy

Then cars in parking lots would permanently be admitting pepper drizzle, in a parking lot hundreds of remote keys are used permanently, so it has to be able to see signals without assuming it is failed attempts. They need to increase the complexity of the codes, add more bits, make it too hard to crack.

ashford
lionfan

Can very likely take the entire damn car if it uses keyless ignition, right?

Testicules

For most cars, the thief would still have to deal with the mechanical steering lock that is released by the mechanical portion of the key.

As for some cars that now have keyless thrust button embark features… ?

clovellstc

The car permanently scans for the key. Since this is very likely just a device and sends out a bunch of signals in a row he wouldn’t know which one was for the car, so I doubt it would work on the ignition.

Phillip Coiner

I know how they are doing it. Have the cops send me an e-mail

john Bowler

See a classic Forrest Whitaker film “Ghost Dog”. The hero uses one of those code generators to steal luxury cars.

So, They may steal them from Tow Truck Drivers?

Tester

The device works by “pinging” the FOB on the key chain which, in turn, generates a signal to the vehicle. The device only works when the keys are within operational range of the vehicle.

Frank

This techbology isn’t fresh, over a decade old if anything. They demonstrated this in the movie, ‘Gone in sixty Seconds’.

Device is available on aliexpress from china for $600 or less. Clones key fobs and can transmit them. It’s not a mystery.

Thats not how they work. You need access to the original keys and the car to make a clone.

Most people keep their registration and garage door opener in their car. If a thief observes you leave your vehicle in a parking lot and can access your car this way, he can go to your home and rob it while you’re shopping or standing in the parking lot wondering where your car is.

Dan Darius

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

It’s a shame that cops are always reactive instead of proactive.

Dan Darius
Dee Ouchman

It’s a ordinary Tesla coil which energised the door lock/unlock servo.

Justa Joe

I don’t need a fresh car that badly. My two thousand five Ford Concentrate has manual (mechanical) doorlocks, manual (arm crank) windows, and a 5-speed manual transmission. Its also carrying 275,000 miles on the odometer.

I’m in no fear of anyone attempting to steal my wheels.

Marc M

Yes, we have the exact same car – two thousand five Ford Concentrate. Looks like a ruddy ordnance vehicle, but I like it because it has NOTHING (except AC). Manual trans, windows, everything. And a freakin’ metal key. I do not like this fresh crap. “The more the over-think the plumbing, the lighter it is to stop up the drain,” in the words of Scotty. And every journey to the stealership to fix the over-thought under-engineered geek fucktoys is an exercise on your wallet.

This is accomplish rubbish. The rolling code protocol (keyloq) used by keyless entry will only permit two hundred fifty six code attempts before the original key will need to be reset. This is a hoax.

George Johnson

Evidently the cops are NOT one step ahead of the criminals.

Starheart

There are too many COPS that ARE the CRIMINALS OUT THERE.

pithypaul

The thief is going to sue for invasion of his own privacy, as nobody asked him for permission to use his pic. Hey, this is Amerika.

SMARTERTHANYOU

Wow.. these reporters, especially the police department, are frankly imbeciles! The technology is over a decade old, it’s called a laptop and a receiver.

Starheart

Homeland Security Personnel are using very advanced electronic technology to hack into everything now.

People like Kay Griggs, Michael Hastings, Phillip Marshall, Judi Bari and myself have been targeted by some of these these special ops Homeland Security personnel involved in criminal operations in the US. They have been promoting and rewarding war criminals for years from the CIA and Military Black Sites and Torment Facilities, into Homeland Security, FBI, Law Enforcement, and other government agencies across the country, to target citizens for surveillance and crimes.

(See Kay Griggs movies on you tube, as she gives her testimonial for what has been going on for a long time now.)

Since 2011, I’ve been targeted for surveillance burglaries, vandalism, pet torment, vehicle tampering as well as the planting of stolen and unknown origin property and malicious prosecution. My safe deposit box in, Colville, WA ,was even burglarized. I can’t find any organization to help me, out of the dozens and dozens of civil and constitutional rights organizations and attorneys I’ve contacted. I had to get a private investigator to trace license plates and find out who some of the people involved in these targeted black operations are.

I can’t get my FOIA Requests fulfilled for information on my surveillance “Watch List” targeted crimes and it’s even common skill in Washington state that Homeland Security personnel are involved in my targeted surveillance and gang stalking crimes. There has even been one out of court settlement in one case in the Seattle area for these criminal activities by Homeland Security Personnel.

My cruise control stopped working on my one hundred forty mile tour back from Spokane WA, on Thursday February 26th (about two weeks ago), and I was gang stalked on the road by numerous vehicles (one of them with a Big Transformer Decal on the Back Window, one with a Big US “Infantry” sticker on his back window, as well as by WA license plate # WEPLAY2) and after they all turned off and I got past Colville, WA, I attempted my cruise control again and it embarked working. I know they have had remote control over my car alarms on my vehicles for a long time now, and it looks to me that they can also remote control my cruise control as well now……

They have been using FOIA DENIALS, FOIA APPEAL DENIALS, GAG ORDERS, NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS AND EVEN – “CLASSIFYING” INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COVER UP THEIR CRIMES AGAINST TARGETED INDIVIDUALS, ACTIVISTS AND JOURNALISTS.

Witness: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car, Q13 FOX News

Witness: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car

SEATTLE — A West Seattle man is sharing a surveillance movie that shows the panicking way thieves are using technology to break into cars.

See the movie as a man approaches Tom Dahl’s truck in this driveway. He attempts the treat, but the door is locked. So he takes off his backpack, moves it close to the window. Seconds later, he’s able to get inwards.

Photo Gallery

“He opens the door up,” says Dahl. “The lights went on, it was disarmed.”

Dahl is glad the thief didn’t take his truck. All he did was rummage through the contents of his glove compartment.

“I was clever enough not to carry anything of value in there. That’s what he was looking for.”

But Dahl is worried about how the thief got in so lightly.

“You used to have a wire that you slipped down the window, when it was mechanical. But now it’s electronic.”

Cases like this are becoming more common across the region.

Lars Carlson says the man who broke into his car in January also appeared to be carrying something in a backpack.

“It’s running through codes automatically or it’s a button they’re pushing or something is happening. But whatever it does, it seems to trick the car into thinking he’s got the legitimate keys.”

Seattle police say they don’t know exactly what kind of device thieves are using, or how it works. But they are worried.

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

Dahl says automakers need to do something to give people a little more security. But until that happens, he’s going to share this movie with as many neighbors as he can.

“I hope other people pay attention, make sure things are secure and locked, and don’t keep things in your car that are of any value.”

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

thirty two comments

Slam1263 (@IKnowBO)

It is just a random code transmitter.

They can transmit a million codes with the shove of a button.

Tow truck driver have been using them for over twenty years.

Don’t the receivers limit the number of failed attempts per 2nd?

Sadly No they don’t

Rodger Wolkins

They need to emit a cloud of pepper bust after three failed attempts.

Fresh Stud

Then cars in parking lots would permanently be admitting pepper splatter, in a parking lot hundreds of remote keys are used permanently, so it has to be able to see signals without assuming it is failed attempts. They need to increase the complexity of the codes, add more bits, make it too hard to crack.

ashford
lionfan

Can most likely take the entire damn car if it uses keyless ignition, right?

Testicules

For most cars, the thief would still have to deal with the mechanical steering lock that is released by the mechanical portion of the key.

As for some cars that now have keyless shove button begin features… ?

clovellstc

The car permanently scans for the key. Since this is most likely just a device and sends out a bunch of signals in a row he wouldn’t know which one was for the car, so I doubt it would work on the ignition.

Phillip Coiner

I know how they are doing it. Have the cops send me an e-mail

john Bowler

Witness a classic Forrest Whitaker film “Ghost Dog”. The hero uses one of those code generators to steal luxury cars.

So, They may steal them from Tow Truck Drivers?

Tester

The device works by “pinging” the FOB on the key chain which, in turn, generates a signal to the vehicle. The device only works when the keys are within operational range of the vehicle.

Frank

This techbology isn’t fresh, over a decade old if anything. They demonstrated this in the movie, ‘Gone in sixty Seconds’.

Device is available on aliexpress from china for $600 or less. Clones key fobs and can transmit them. It’s not a mystery.

Thats not how they work. You need access to the original keys and the car to make a clone.

Most people keep their registration and garage door opener in their car. If a thief observes you leave your vehicle in a parking lot and can access your car this way, he can go to your home and rob it while you’re shopping or standing in the parking lot wondering where your car is.

Dan Darius

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

It’s a shame that cops are always reactive instead of proactive.

Dan Darius
Dee Ouchman

It’s a plain Tesla coil which energised the door lock/unlock servo.

Justa Joe

I don’t need a fresh car that badly. My two thousand five Ford Concentrate has manual (mechanical) doorlocks, manual (forearm crank) windows, and a 5-speed manual transmission. Its also carrying 275,000 miles on the odometer.

I’m in no fear of anyone attempting to steal my wheels.

Marc M

Yes, we have the exact same car – two thousand five Ford Concentrate. Looks like a ruddy ordnance vehicle, but I like it because it has NOTHING (except AC). Manual trans, windows, everything. And a freakin’ metal key. I do not like this fresh crap. “The more the over-think the plumbing, the lighter it is to stop up the drain,” in the words of Scotty. And every journey to the stealership to fix the over-thought under-engineered geek fucktoys is an exercise on your wallet.

This is accomplish rubbish. The rolling code protocol (keyloq) used by keyless entry will only permit two hundred fifty six code attempts before the original key will need to be reset. This is a hoax.

George Johnson

Evidently the cops are NOT one step ahead of the criminals.

Starheart

There are too many COPS that ARE the CRIMINALS OUT THERE.

pithypaul

The thief is going to sue for invasion of his own privacy, as nobody asked him for permission to use his photo. Hey, this is Amerika.

SMARTERTHANYOU

Wow.. these reporters, especially the police department, are frankly imbeciles! The technology is over a decade old, it’s called a laptop and a receiver.

Starheart

Homeland Security Personnel are using very advanced electronic technology to hack into everything now.

People like Kay Griggs, Michael Hastings, Phillip Marshall, Judi Bari and myself have been targeted by some of these these special ops Homeland Security personnel involved in criminal operations in the US. They have been promoting and rewarding war criminals for years from the CIA and Military Black Sites and Torment Facilities, into Homeland Security, FBI, Law Enforcement, and other government agencies across the country, to target citizens for surveillance and crimes.

(See Kay Griggs movies on you tube, as she gives her testimonial for what has been going on for a long time now.)

Since 2011, I’ve been targeted for surveillance burglaries, vandalism, pet torment, vehicle tampering as well as the planting of stolen and unknown origin property and malicious prosecution. My safe deposit box in, Colville, WA ,was even burglarized. I can’t find any organization to help me, out of the dozens and dozens of civil and constitutional rights organizations and attorneys I’ve contacted. I had to get a private investigator to trace license plates and find out who some of the people involved in these targeted black operations are.

I can’t get my FOIA Requests fulfilled for information on my surveillance “Watch List” targeted crimes and it’s even common skill in Washington state that Homeland Security personnel are involved in my targeted surveillance and gang stalking crimes. There has even been one out of court settlement in one case in the Seattle area for these criminal activities by Homeland Security Personnel.

My cruise control stopped working on my one hundred forty mile journey back from Spokane WA, on Thursday February 26th (about two weeks ago), and I was gang stalked on the road by numerous vehicles (one of them with a Big Transformer Decal on the Back Window, one with a Big US “Infantry” sticker on his back window, as well as by WA license plate # WEPLAY2) and after they all turned off and I got past Colville, WA, I attempted my cruise control again and it began working. I know they have had remote control over my car alarms on my vehicles for a long time now, and it looks to me that they can also remote control my cruise control as well now……

They have been using FOIA DENIALS, FOIA APPEAL DENIALS, GAG ORDERS, NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS AND EVEN – “CLASSIFYING” INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COVER UP THEIR CRIMES AGAINST TARGETED INDIVIDUALS, ACTIVISTS AND JOURNALISTS.

Witness: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car, Q13 FOX News

Observe: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car

SEATTLE — A West Seattle man is sharing a surveillance movie that shows the scaring way thieves are using technology to break into cars.

Observe the movie as a man approaches Tom Dahl’s truck in this driveway. He attempts the treat, but the door is locked. So he takes off his backpack, moves it close to the window. Seconds later, he’s able to get inwards.

Photo Gallery

“He opens the door up,” says Dahl. “The lights went on, it was disarmed.”

Dahl is glad the thief didn’t take his truck. All he did was rummage through the contents of his glove compartment.

“I was clever enough not to carry anything of value in there. That’s what he was looking for.”

But Dahl is worried about how the thief got in so lightly.

“You used to have a wire that you slipped down the window, when it was mechanical. But now it’s electronic.”

Cases like this are becoming more common across the region.

Lars Carlson says the man who broke into his car in January also appeared to be carrying something in a backpack.

“It’s running through codes automatically or it’s a button they’re pushing or something is happening. But whatever it does, it seems to trick the car into thinking he’s got the legitimate keys.”

Seattle police say they don’t know exactly what kind of device thieves are using, or how it works. But they are worried.

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

Dahl says automakers need to do something to give people a little more security. But until that happens, he’s going to share this movie with as many neighbors as he can.

“I hope other people pay attention, make sure things are secure and locked, and don’t keep things in your car that are of any value.”

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

thirty two comments

Slam1263 (@IKnowBO)

It is just a random code transmitter.

They can transmit a million codes with the thrust of a button.

Tow truck driver have been using them for over twenty years.

Don’t the receivers limit the number of failed attempts per 2nd?

Sadly No they don’t

Rodger Wolkins

They need to emit a cloud of pepper sploog after three failed attempts.

Fresh Boy

Then cars in parking lots would permanently be admitting pepper splatter, in a parking lot hundreds of remote keys are used permanently, so it has to be able to see signals without assuming it is failed attempts. They need to increase the complexity of the codes, add more bits, make it too hard to crack.

ashford
lionfan

Can very likely take the entire damn car if it uses keyless ignition, right?

Testicules

For most cars, the thief would still have to deal with the mechanical steering lock that is released by the mechanical portion of the key.

As for some cars that now have keyless thrust button commence features… ?

clovellstc

The car permanently scans for the key. Since this is most likely just a device and sends out a bunch of signals in a row he wouldn’t know which one was for the car, so I doubt it would work on the ignition.

Phillip Coiner

I know how they are doing it. Have the cops send me an e-mail

john Bowler

Witness a classic Forrest Whitaker film “Ghost Dog”. The hero uses one of those code generators to steal luxury cars.

So, They may steal them from Tow Truck Drivers?

Tester

The device works by “pinging” the FOB on the key chain which, in turn, generates a signal to the vehicle. The device only works when the keys are within operational range of the vehicle.

Frank

This techbology isn’t fresh, over a decade old if anything. They demonstrated this in the movie, ‘Gone in sixty Seconds’.

Device is available on aliexpress from china for $600 or less. Clones key fobs and can transmit them. It’s not a mystery.

Thats not how they work. You need access to the original keys and the car to make a clone.

Most people keep their registration and garage door opener in their car. If a thief sees you leave your vehicle in a parking lot and can access your car this way, he can go to your home and rob it while you’re shopping or standing in the parking lot wondering where your car is.

Dan Darius

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

It’s a shame that cops are always reactive instead of proactive.

Dan Darius
Dee Ouchman

It’s a elementary Tesla coil which energised the door lock/unlock servo.

Justa Joe

I don’t need a fresh car that badly. My two thousand five Ford Concentrate has manual (mechanical) doorlocks, manual (forearm crank) windows, and a 5-speed manual transmission. Its also carrying 275,000 miles on the odometer.

I’m in no fear of anyone attempting to steal my wheels.

Marc M

Yes, we have the exact same car – two thousand five Ford Concentrate. Looks like a ruddy ordnance vehicle, but I like it because it has NOTHING (except AC). Manual trans, windows, everything. And a freakin’ metal key. I do not like this fresh crap. “The more the over-think the plumbing, the lighter it is to stop up the drain,” in the words of Scotty. And every journey to the stealership to fix the over-thought under-engineered geek fucktoys is an exercise on your wallet.

This is accomplish rubbish. The rolling code protocol (keyloq) used by keyless entry will only permit two hundred fifty six code attempts before the original key will need to be reset. This is a hoax.

George Johnson

Evidently the cops are NOT one step ahead of the criminals.

Starheart

There are too many COPS that ARE the CRIMINALS OUT THERE.

pithypaul

The thief is going to sue for invasion of his own privacy, as nobody asked him for permission to use his photo. Hey, this is Amerika.

SMARTERTHANYOU

Wow.. these reporters, especially the police department, are frankly imbeciles! The technology is over a decade old, it’s called a laptop and a receiver.

Starheart

Homeland Security Personnel are using very advanced electronic technology to hack into everything now.

People like Kay Griggs, Michael Hastings, Phillip Marshall, Judi Bari and myself have been targeted by some of these these special ops Homeland Security personnel involved in criminal operations in the US. They have been promoting and rewarding war criminals for years from the CIA and Military Black Sites and Torment Facilities, into Homeland Security, FBI, Law Enforcement, and other government agencies across the country, to target citizens for surveillance and crimes.

(Observe Kay Griggs movies on you tube, as she gives her testimonial for what has been going on for a long time now.)

Since 2011, I’ve been targeted for surveillance burglaries, vandalism, pet torment, vehicle tampering as well as the planting of stolen and unknown origin property and malicious prosecution. My safe deposit box in, Colville, WA ,was even burglarized. I can’t find any organization to help me, out of the dozens and dozens of civil and constitutional rights organizations and attorneys I’ve contacted. I had to get a private investigator to trace license plates and find out who some of the people involved in these targeted black operations are.

I can’t get my FOIA Requests fulfilled for information on my surveillance “Watch List” targeted crimes and it’s even common skill in Washington state that Homeland Security personnel are involved in my targeted surveillance and gang stalking crimes. There has even been one out of court settlement in one case in the Seattle area for these criminal activities by Homeland Security Personnel.

My cruise control stopped working on my one hundred forty mile tour back from Spokane WA, on Thursday February 26th (about two weeks ago), and I was gang stalked on the road by numerous vehicles (one of them with a Big Transformer Decal on the Back Window, one with a Big US “Infantry” sticker on his back window, as well as by WA license plate # WEPLAY2) and after they all turned off and I got past Colville, WA, I attempted my cruise control again and it commenced working. I know they have had remote control over my car alarms on my vehicles for a long time now, and it looks to me that they can also remote control my cruise control as well now……

They have been using FOIA DENIALS, FOIA APPEAL DENIALS, GAG ORDERS, NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS AND EVEN – “CLASSIFYING” INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COVER UP THEIR CRIMES AGAINST TARGETED INDIVIDUALS, ACTIVISTS AND JOURNALISTS.

See: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car, Q13 FOX News

Observe: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car

SEATTLE — A West Seattle man is sharing a surveillance movie that shows the panicking way thieves are using technology to break into cars.

Observe the movie as a man approaches Tom Dahl’s truck in this driveway. He attempts the treat, but the door is locked. So he takes off his backpack, moves it close to the window. Seconds later, he’s able to get inwards.

Photo Gallery

“He opens the door up,” says Dahl. “The lights went on, it was disarmed.”

Dahl is glad the thief didn’t take his truck. All he did was rummage through the contents of his glove compartment.

“I was clever enough not to carry anything of value in there. That’s what he was looking for.”

But Dahl is worried about how the thief got in so lightly.

“You used to have a wire that you slipped down the window, when it was mechanical. But now it’s electronic.”

Cases like this are becoming more common across the region.

Lars Carlson says the man who broke into his car in January also appeared to be carrying something in a backpack.

“It’s running through codes automatically or it’s a button they’re pushing or something is happening. But whatever it does, it seems to trick the car into thinking he’s got the legitimate keys.”

Seattle police say they don’t know exactly what kind of device thieves are using, or how it works. But they are worried.

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

Dahl says automakers need to do something to give people a little more security. But until that happens, he’s going to share this movie with as many neighbors as he can.

“I hope other people pay attention, make sure things are secure and locked, and don’t keep things in your car that are of any value.”

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

thirty two comments

Slam1263 (@IKnowBO)

It is just a random code transmitter.

They can transmit a million codes with the shove of a button.

Tow truck driver have been using them for over twenty years.

Don’t the receivers limit the number of failed attempts per 2nd?

Sadly No they don’t

Rodger Wolkins

They need to emit a cloud of pepper splash after three failed attempts.

Fresh Dude

Then cars in parking lots would permanently be admitting pepper splatter, in a parking lot hundreds of remote keys are used permanently, so it has to be able to see signals without assuming it is failed attempts. They need to increase the complexity of the codes, add more bits, make it too hard to crack.

ashford
lionfan

Can most likely take the entire damn car if it uses keyless ignition, right?

Testicules

For most cars, the thief would still have to deal with the mechanical steering lock that is released by the mechanical portion of the key.

As for some cars that now have keyless shove button begin features… ?

clovellstc

The car permanently scans for the key. Since this is very likely just a device and sends out a bunch of signals in a row he wouldn’t know which one was for the car, so I doubt it would work on the ignition.

Phillip Coiner

I know how they are doing it. Have the cops send me an e-mail

john Bowler

See a classic Forrest Whitaker film “Ghost Dog”. The hero uses one of those code generators to steal luxury cars.

So, They may steal them from Tow Truck Drivers?

Tester

The device works by “pinging” the FOB on the key chain which, in turn, generates a signal to the vehicle. The device only works when the keys are within operational range of the vehicle.

Frank

This techbology isn’t fresh, over a decade old if anything. They demonstrated this in the movie, ‘Gone in sixty Seconds’.

Device is available on aliexpress from china for $600 or less. Clones key fobs and can transmit them. It’s not a mystery.

Thats not how they work. You need access to the original keys and the car to make a clone.

Most people keep their registration and garage door opener in their car. If a thief observes you leave your vehicle in a parking lot and can access your car this way, he can go to your home and rob it while you’re shopping or standing in the parking lot wondering where your car is.

Dan Darius

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

It’s a shame that cops are always reactive instead of proactive.

Dan Darius
Dee Ouchman

It’s a elementary Tesla coil which energised the door lock/unlock servo.

Justa Joe

I don’t need a fresh car that badly. My two thousand five Ford Concentrate has manual (mechanical) doorlocks, manual (palm crank) windows, and a 5-speed manual transmission. Its also carrying 275,000 miles on the odometer.

I’m in no fear of anyone attempting to steal my wheels.

Marc M

Yes, we have the exact same car – two thousand five Ford Concentrate. Looks like a ruddy ordnance vehicle, but I like it because it has NOTHING (except AC). Manual trans, windows, everything. And a freakin’ metal key. I do not like this fresh crap. “The more the over-think the plumbing, the lighter it is to stop up the drain,” in the words of Scotty. And every journey to the stealership to fix the over-thought under-engineered geek fucktoys is an exercise on your wallet.

This is finish rubbish. The rolling code protocol (keyloq) used by keyless entry will only permit two hundred fifty six code attempts before the original key will need to be reset. This is a hoax.

George Johnson

Evidently the cops are NOT one step ahead of the criminals.

Starheart

There are too many COPS that ARE the CRIMINALS OUT THERE.

pithypaul

The thief is going to sue for invasion of his own privacy, as nobody asked him for permission to use his picture. Hey, this is Amerika.

SMARTERTHANYOU

Wow.. these reporters, especially the police department, are frankly imbeciles! The technology is over a decade old, it’s called a laptop and a receiver.

Starheart

Homeland Security Personnel are using very advanced electronic technology to hack into everything now.

People like Kay Griggs, Michael Hastings, Phillip Marshall, Judi Bari and myself have been targeted by some of these these special ops Homeland Security personnel involved in criminal operations in the US. They have been promoting and rewarding war criminals for years from the CIA and Military Black Sites and Torment Facilities, into Homeland Security, FBI, Law Enforcement, and other government agencies across the country, to target citizens for surveillance and crimes.

(Witness Kay Griggs movies on you tube, as she gives her testimonial for what has been going on for a long time now.)

Since 2011, I’ve been targeted for surveillance burglaries, vandalism, pet torment, vehicle tampering as well as the planting of stolen and unknown origin property and malicious prosecution. My safe deposit box in, Colville, WA ,was even burglarized. I can’t find any organization to help me, out of the dozens and dozens of civil and constitutional rights organizations and attorneys I’ve contacted. I had to get a private investigator to trace license plates and find out who some of the people involved in these targeted black operations are.

I can’t get my FOIA Requests fulfilled for information on my surveillance “Watch List” targeted crimes and it’s even common skill in Washington state that Homeland Security personnel are involved in my targeted surveillance and gang stalking crimes. There has even been one out of court settlement in one case in the Seattle area for these criminal activities by Homeland Security Personnel.

My cruise control stopped working on my one hundred forty mile excursion back from Spokane WA, on Thursday February 26th (about two weeks ago), and I was gang stalked on the road by numerous vehicles (one of them with a Big Transformer Decal on the Back Window, one with a Big US “Infantry” sticker on his back window, as well as by WA license plate # WEPLAY2) and after they all turned off and I got past Colville, WA, I attempted my cruise control again and it embarked working. I know they have had remote control over my car alarms on my vehicles for a long time now, and it looks to me that they can also remote control my cruise control as well now……

They have been using FOIA DENIALS, FOIA APPEAL DENIALS, GAG ORDERS, NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS AND EVEN – “CLASSIFYING” INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COVER UP THEIR CRIMES AGAINST TARGETED INDIVIDUALS, ACTIVISTS AND JOURNALISTS.

See: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car, Q13 FOX News

Witness: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car

SEATTLE — A West Seattle man is sharing a surveillance movie that shows the scaring way thieves are using technology to break into cars.

Witness the movie as a man approaches Tom Dahl’s truck in this driveway. He attempts the treat, but the door is locked. So he takes off his backpack, moves it close to the window. Seconds later, he’s able to get inwards.

Photo Gallery

“He opens the door up,” says Dahl. “The lights went on, it was disarmed.”

Dahl is glad the thief didn’t take his truck. All he did was rummage through the contents of his glove compartment.

“I was clever enough not to carry anything of value in there. That’s what he was looking for.”

But Dahl is worried about how the thief got in so lightly.

“You used to have a wire that you glided down the window, when it was mechanical. But now it’s electronic.”

Cases like this are becoming more common across the region.

Lars Carlson says the man who broke into his car in January also appeared to be carrying something in a backpack.

“It’s running through codes automatically or it’s a button they’re pushing or something is happening. But whatever it does, it seems to trick the car into thinking he’s got the legitimate keys.”

Seattle police say they don’t know exactly what kind of device thieves are using, or how it works. But they are worried.

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

Dahl says automakers need to do something to give people a little more security. But until that happens, he’s going to share this movie with as many neighbors as he can.

“I hope other people pay attention, make sure things are secure and locked, and don’t keep things in your car that are of any value.”

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

thirty two comments

Slam1263 (@IKnowBO)

It is just a random code transmitter.

They can transmit a million codes with the thrust of a button.

Tow truck driver have been using them for over twenty years.

Don’t the receivers limit the number of failed attempts per 2nd?

Sadly No they don’t

Rodger Wolkins

They need to emit a cloud of pepper unload after three failed attempts.

Fresh Dude

Then cars in parking lots would permanently be admitting pepper drizzle, in a parking lot hundreds of remote keys are used permanently, so it has to be able to see signals without assuming it is failed attempts. They need to increase the complexity of the codes, add more bits, make it too hard to crack.

ashford
lionfan

Can most likely take the entire damn car if it uses keyless ignition, right?

Testicules

For most cars, the thief would still have to deal with the mechanical steering lock that is released by the mechanical portion of the key.

As for some cars that now have keyless thrust button commence features… ?

clovellstc

The car permanently scans for the key. Since this is very likely just a device and sends out a bunch of signals in a row he wouldn’t know which one was for the car, so I doubt it would work on the ignition.

Phillip Coiner

I know how they are doing it. Have the cops send me an e-mail

john Bowler

Observe a classic Forrest Whitaker film “Ghost Dog”. The hero uses one of those code generators to steal luxury cars.

So, They may steal them from Tow Truck Drivers?

Tester

The device works by “pinging” the FOB on the key chain which, in turn, generates a signal to the vehicle. The device only works when the keys are within operational range of the vehicle.

Frank

This techbology isn’t fresh, over a decade old if anything. They demonstrated this in the movie, ‘Gone in sixty Seconds’.

Device is available on aliexpress from china for $600 or less. Clones key fobs and can transmit them. It’s not a mystery.

Thats not how they work. You need access to the original keys and the car to make a clone.

Most people keep their registration and garage door opener in their car. If a thief sees you leave your vehicle in a parking lot and can access your car this way, he can go to your home and rob it while you’re shopping or standing in the parking lot wondering where your car is.

Dan Darius

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

It’s a shame that cops are always reactive instead of proactive.

Dan Darius
Dee Ouchman

It’s a elementary Tesla coil which energised the door lock/unlock servo.

Justa Joe

I don’t need a fresh car that badly. My two thousand five Ford Concentrate has manual (mechanical) doorlocks, manual (palm crank) windows, and a 5-speed manual transmission. Its also carrying 275,000 miles on the odometer.

I’m in no fear of anyone attempting to steal my wheels.

Marc M

Yes, we have the exact same car – two thousand five Ford Concentrate. Looks like a ruddy ordnance vehicle, but I like it because it has NOTHING (except AC). Manual trans, windows, everything. And a freakin’ metal key. I do not like this fresh crap. “The more the over-think the plumbing, the lighter it is to stop up the drain,” in the words of Scotty. And every journey to the stealership to fix the over-thought under-engineered geek fucktoys is an exercise on your wallet.

This is finish rubbish. The rolling code protocol (keyloq) used by keyless entry will only permit two hundred fifty six code attempts before the original key will need to be reset. This is a hoax.

George Johnson

Evidently the cops are NOT one step ahead of the criminals.

Starheart

There are too many COPS that ARE the CRIMINALS OUT THERE.

pithypaul

The thief is going to sue for invasion of his own privacy, as nobody asked him for permission to use his picture. Hey, this is Amerika.

SMARTERTHANYOU

Wow.. these reporters, especially the police department, are frankly imbeciles! The technology is over a decade old, it’s called a laptop and a receiver.

Starheart

Homeland Security Personnel are using very advanced electronic technology to hack into everything now.

People like Kay Griggs, Michael Hastings, Phillip Marshall, Judi Bari and myself have been targeted by some of these these special ops Homeland Security personnel involved in criminal operations in the US. They have been promoting and rewarding war criminals for years from the CIA and Military Black Sites and Torment Facilities, into Homeland Security, FBI, Law Enforcement, and other government agencies across the country, to target citizens for surveillance and crimes.

(Witness Kay Griggs movies on you tube, as she gives her testimonial for what has been going on for a long time now.)

Since 2011, I’ve been targeted for surveillance burglaries, vandalism, pet torment, vehicle tampering as well as the planting of stolen and unknown origin property and malicious prosecution. My safe deposit box in, Colville, WA ,was even burglarized. I can’t find any organization to help me, out of the dozens and dozens of civil and constitutional rights organizations and attorneys I’ve contacted. I had to get a private investigator to trace license plates and find out who some of the people involved in these targeted black operations are.

I can’t get my FOIA Requests fulfilled for information on my surveillance “Watch List” targeted crimes and it’s even common skill in Washington state that Homeland Security personnel are involved in my targeted surveillance and gang stalking crimes. There has even been one out of court settlement in one case in the Seattle area for these criminal activities by Homeland Security Personnel.

My cruise control stopped working on my one hundred forty mile journey back from Spokane WA, on Thursday February 26th (about two weeks ago), and I was gang stalked on the road by numerous vehicles (one of them with a Big Transformer Decal on the Back Window, one with a Big US “Infantry” sticker on his back window, as well as by WA license plate # WEPLAY2) and after they all turned off and I got past Colville, WA, I attempted my cruise control again and it commenced working. I know they have had remote control over my car alarms on my vehicles for a long time now, and it looks to me that they can also remote control my cruise control as well now……

They have been using FOIA DENIALS, FOIA APPEAL DENIALS, GAG ORDERS, NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS AND EVEN – “CLASSIFYING” INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COVER UP THEIR CRIMES AGAINST TARGETED INDIVIDUALS, ACTIVISTS AND JOURNALISTS.

Witness: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car, Q13 FOX News

Witness: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car

SEATTLE — A West Seattle man is sharing a surveillance movie that shows the panicking way thieves are using technology to break into cars.

Observe the movie as a man approaches Tom Dahl’s truck in this driveway. He attempts the treat, but the door is locked. So he takes off his backpack, moves it close to the window. Seconds later, he’s able to get inwards.

Photo Gallery

“He opens the door up,” says Dahl. “The lights went on, it was disarmed.”

Dahl is glad the thief didn’t take his truck. All he did was rummage through the contents of his glove compartment.

“I was clever enough not to carry anything of value in there. That’s what he was looking for.”

But Dahl is worried about how the thief got in so lightly.

“You used to have a wire that you glided down the window, when it was mechanical. But now it’s electronic.”

Cases like this are becoming more common across the region.

Lars Carlson says the man who broke into his car in January also appeared to be carrying something in a backpack.

“It’s running through codes automatically or it’s a button they’re pushing or something is happening. But whatever it does, it seems to trick the car into thinking he’s got the legitimate keys.”

Seattle police say they don’t know exactly what kind of device thieves are using, or how it works. But they are worried.

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

Dahl says automakers need to do something to give people a little more security. But until that happens, he’s going to share this movie with as many neighbors as he can.

“I hope other people pay attention, make sure things are secure and locked, and don’t keep things in your car that are of any value.”

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

thirty two comments

Slam1263 (@IKnowBO)

It is just a random code transmitter.

They can transmit a million codes with the shove of a button.

Tow truck driver have been using them for over twenty years.

Don’t the receivers limit the number of failed attempts per 2nd?

Sadly No they don’t

Rodger Wolkins

They need to emit a cloud of pepper unload after three failed attempts.

Fresh Boy

Then cars in parking lots would permanently be admitting pepper unload, in a parking lot hundreds of remote keys are used permanently, so it has to be able to see signals without assuming it is failed attempts. They need to increase the complexity of the codes, add more bits, make it too hard to crack.

ashford
lionfan

Can very likely take the entire damn car if it uses keyless ignition, right?

Testicules

For most cars, the thief would still have to deal with the mechanical steering lock that is released by the mechanical portion of the key.

As for some cars that now have keyless thrust button embark features… ?

clovellstc

The car permanently scans for the key. Since this is most likely just a device and sends out a bunch of signals in a row he wouldn’t know which one was for the car, so I doubt it would work on the ignition.

Phillip Coiner

I know how they are doing it. Have the cops send me an e-mail

john Bowler

See a classic Forrest Whitaker film “Ghost Dog”. The hero uses one of those code generators to steal luxury cars.

So, They may steal them from Tow Truck Drivers?

Tester

The device works by “pinging” the FOB on the key chain which, in turn, generates a signal to the vehicle. The device only works when the keys are within operational range of the vehicle.

Frank

This techbology isn’t fresh, over a decade old if anything. They demonstrated this in the movie, ‘Gone in sixty Seconds’.

Device is available on aliexpress from china for $600 or less. Clones key fobs and can transmit them. It’s not a mystery.

Thats not how they work. You need access to the original keys and the car to make a clone.

Most people keep their registration and garage door opener in their car. If a thief witnesses you leave your vehicle in a parking lot and can access your car this way, he can go to your home and rob it while you’re shopping or standing in the parking lot wondering where your car is.

Dan Darius

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

It’s a shame that cops are always reactive instead of proactive.

Dan Darius
Dee Ouchman

It’s a elementary Tesla coil which energised the door lock/unlock servo.

Justa Joe

I don’t need a fresh car that badly. My two thousand five Ford Concentrate has manual (mechanical) doorlocks, manual (mitt crank) windows, and a 5-speed manual transmission. Its also carrying 275,000 miles on the odometer.

I’m in no fear of anyone attempting to steal my wheels.

Marc M

Yes, we have the exact same car – two thousand five Ford Concentrate. Looks like a ruddy ordnance vehicle, but I like it because it has NOTHING (except AC). Manual trans, windows, everything. And a freakin’ metal key. I do not like this fresh crap. “The more the over-think the plumbing, the lighter it is to stop up the drain,” in the words of Scotty. And every journey to the stealership to fix the over-thought under-engineered geek fucktoys is an exercise on your wallet.

This is finish rubbish. The rolling code protocol (keyloq) used by keyless entry will only permit two hundred fifty six code attempts before the original key will need to be reset. This is a hoax.

George Johnson

Evidently the cops are NOT one step ahead of the criminals.

Starheart

There are too many COPS that ARE the CRIMINALS OUT THERE.

pithypaul

The thief is going to sue for invasion of his own privacy, as nobody asked him for permission to use his pic. Hey, this is Amerika.

SMARTERTHANYOU

Wow.. these reporters, especially the police department, are frankly imbeciles! The technology is over a decade old, it’s called a laptop and a receiver.

Starheart

Homeland Security Personnel are using very advanced electronic technology to hack into everything now.

People like Kay Griggs, Michael Hastings, Phillip Marshall, Judi Bari and myself have been targeted by some of these these special ops Homeland Security personnel involved in criminal operations in the US. They have been promoting and rewarding war criminals for years from the CIA and Military Black Sites and Torment Facilities, into Homeland Security, FBI, Law Enforcement, and other government agencies across the country, to target citizens for surveillance and crimes.

(Witness Kay Griggs movies on you tube, as she gives her testimonial for what has been going on for a long time now.)

Since 2011, I’ve been targeted for surveillance burglaries, vandalism, pet torment, vehicle tampering as well as the planting of stolen and unknown origin property and malicious prosecution. My safe deposit box in, Colville, WA ,was even burglarized. I can’t find any organization to help me, out of the dozens and dozens of civil and constitutional rights organizations and attorneys I’ve contacted. I had to get a private investigator to trace license plates and find out who some of the people involved in these targeted black operations are.

I can’t get my FOIA Requests fulfilled for information on my surveillance “Watch List” targeted crimes and it’s even common skill in Washington state that Homeland Security personnel are involved in my targeted surveillance and gang stalking crimes. There has even been one out of court settlement in one case in the Seattle area for these criminal activities by Homeland Security Personnel.

My cruise control stopped working on my one hundred forty mile excursion back from Spokane WA, on Thursday February 26th (about two weeks ago), and I was gang stalked on the road by numerous vehicles (one of them with a Big Transformer Decal on the Back Window, one with a Big US “Infantry” sticker on his back window, as well as by WA license plate # WEPLAY2) and after they all turned off and I got past Colville, WA, I attempted my cruise control again and it commenced working. I know they have had remote control over my car alarms on my vehicles for a long time now, and it looks to me that they can also remote control my cruise control as well now……

They have been using FOIA DENIALS, FOIA APPEAL DENIALS, GAG ORDERS, NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS AND EVEN – “CLASSIFYING” INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COVER UP THEIR CRIMES AGAINST TARGETED INDIVIDUALS, ACTIVISTS AND JOURNALISTS.

See: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car, Q13 FOX News

Witness: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car

SEATTLE — A West Seattle man is sharing a surveillance movie that shows the scaring way thieves are using technology to break into cars.

Observe the movie as a man approaches Tom Dahl’s truck in this driveway. He attempts the treat, but the door is locked. So he takes off his backpack, moves it close to the window. Seconds later, he’s able to get inwards.

Photo Gallery

“He opens the door up,” says Dahl. “The lights went on, it was disarmed.”

Dahl is glad the thief didn’t take his truck. All he did was rummage through the contents of his glove compartment.

“I was brainy enough not to carry anything of value in there. That’s what he was looking for.”

But Dahl is worried about how the thief got in so lightly.

“You used to have a wire that you glided down the window, when it was mechanical. But now it’s electronic.”

Cases like this are becoming more common across the region.

Lars Carlson says the man who broke into his car in January also appeared to be carrying something in a backpack.

“It’s running through codes automatically or it’s a button they’re pushing or something is happening. But whatever it does, it seems to trick the car into thinking he’s got the legitimate keys.”

Seattle police say they don’t know exactly what kind of device thieves are using, or how it works. But they are worried.

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

Dahl says automakers need to do something to give people a little more security. But until that happens, he’s going to share this movie with as many neighbors as he can.

“I hope other people pay attention, make sure things are secure and locked, and don’t keep things in your car that are of any value.”

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

thirty two comments

Slam1263 (@IKnowBO)

It is just a random code transmitter.

They can transmit a million codes with the thrust of a button.

Tow truck driver have been using them for over twenty years.

Don’t the receivers limit the number of failed attempts per 2nd?

Sadly No they don’t

Rodger Wolkins

They need to emit a cloud of pepper drizzle after three failed attempts.

Fresh Boy

Then cars in parking lots would permanently be admitting pepper burst, in a parking lot hundreds of remote keys are used permanently, so it has to be able to see signals without assuming it is failed attempts. They need to increase the complexity of the codes, add more bits, make it too hard to crack.

ashford
lionfan

Can very likely take the entire damn car if it uses keyless ignition, right?

Testicules

For most cars, the thief would still have to deal with the mechanical steering lock that is released by the mechanical portion of the key.

As for some cars that now have keyless thrust button commence features… ?

clovellstc

The car permanently scans for the key. Since this is most likely just a device and sends out a bunch of signals in a row he wouldn’t know which one was for the car, so I doubt it would work on the ignition.

Phillip Coiner

I know how they are doing it. Have the cops send me an e-mail

john Bowler

See a classic Forrest Whitaker film “Ghost Dog”. The hero uses one of those code generators to steal luxury cars.

So, They may steal them from Tow Truck Drivers?

Tester

The device works by “pinging” the FOB on the key chain which, in turn, generates a signal to the vehicle. The device only works when the keys are within operational range of the vehicle.

Frank

This techbology isn’t fresh, over a decade old if anything. They demonstrated this in the movie, ‘Gone in sixty Seconds’.

Device is available on aliexpress from china for $600 or less. Clones key fobs and can transmit them. It’s not a mystery.

Thats not how they work. You need access to the original keys and the car to make a clone.

Most people keep their registration and garage door opener in their car. If a thief observes you leave your vehicle in a parking lot and can access your car this way, he can go to your home and rob it while you’re shopping or standing in the parking lot wondering where your car is.

Dan Darius

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

It’s a shame that cops are always reactive instead of proactive.

Dan Darius
Dee Ouchman

It’s a ordinary Tesla coil which energised the door lock/unlock servo.

Justa Joe

I don’t need a fresh car that badly. My two thousand five Ford Concentrate has manual (mechanical) doorlocks, manual (palm crank) windows, and a 5-speed manual transmission. Its also carrying 275,000 miles on the odometer.

I’m in no fear of anyone attempting to steal my wheels.

Marc M

Yes, we have the exact same car – two thousand five Ford Concentrate. Looks like a ruddy ordnance vehicle, but I like it because it has NOTHING (except AC). Manual trans, windows, everything. And a freakin’ metal key. I do not like this fresh crap. “The more the over-think the plumbing, the lighter it is to stop up the drain,” in the words of Scotty. And every excursion to the stealership to fix the over-thought under-engineered geek fucktoys is an exercise on your wallet.

This is finish rubbish. The rolling code protocol (keyloq) used by keyless entry will only permit two hundred fifty six code attempts before the original key will need to be reset. This is a hoax.

George Johnson

Evidently the cops are NOT one step ahead of the criminals.

Starheart

There are too many COPS that ARE the CRIMINALS OUT THERE.

pithypaul

The thief is going to sue for invasion of his own privacy, as nobody asked him for permission to use his picture. Hey, this is Amerika.

SMARTERTHANYOU

Wow.. these reporters, especially the police department, are frankly imbeciles! The technology is over a decade old, it’s called a laptop and a receiver.

Starheart

Homeland Security Personnel are using very advanced electronic technology to hack into everything now.

People like Kay Griggs, Michael Hastings, Phillip Marshall, Judi Bari and myself have been targeted by some of these these special ops Homeland Security personnel involved in criminal operations in the US. They have been promoting and rewarding war criminals for years from the CIA and Military Black Sites and Torment Facilities, into Homeland Security, FBI, Law Enforcement, and other government agencies across the country, to target citizens for surveillance and crimes.

(Witness Kay Griggs movies on you tube, as she gives her testimonial for what has been going on for a long time now.)

Since 2011, I’ve been targeted for surveillance burglaries, vandalism, pet torment, vehicle tampering as well as the planting of stolen and unknown origin property and malicious prosecution. My safe deposit box in, Colville, WA ,was even burglarized. I can’t find any organization to help me, out of the dozens and dozens of civil and constitutional rights organizations and attorneys I’ve contacted. I had to get a private investigator to trace license plates and find out who some of the people involved in these targeted black operations are.

I can’t get my FOIA Requests fulfilled for information on my surveillance “Watch List” targeted crimes and it’s even common skill in Washington state that Homeland Security personnel are involved in my targeted surveillance and gang stalking crimes. There has even been one out of court settlement in one case in the Seattle area for these criminal activities by Homeland Security Personnel.

My cruise control stopped working on my one hundred forty mile tour back from Spokane WA, on Thursday February 26th (about two weeks ago), and I was gang stalked on the road by numerous vehicles (one of them with a Big Transformer Decal on the Back Window, one with a Big US “Infantry” sticker on his back window, as well as by WA license plate # WEPLAY2) and after they all turned off and I got past Colville, WA, I attempted my cruise control again and it began working. I know they have had remote control over my car alarms on my vehicles for a long time now, and it looks to me that they can also remote control my cruise control as well now……

They have been using FOIA DENIALS, FOIA APPEAL DENIALS, GAG ORDERS, NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS AND EVEN – “CLASSIFYING” INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COVER UP THEIR CRIMES AGAINST TARGETED INDIVIDUALS, ACTIVISTS AND JOURNALISTS.

See: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car, Q13 FOX News

Observe: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car

SEATTLE — A West Seattle man is sharing a surveillance movie that shows the panicking way thieves are using technology to break into cars.

Observe the movie as a man approaches Tom Dahl’s truck in this driveway. He attempts the treat, but the door is locked. So he takes off his backpack, moves it close to the window. Seconds later, he’s able to get inwards.

Photo Gallery

“He opens the door up,” says Dahl. “The lights went on, it was disarmed.”

Dahl is glad the thief didn’t take his truck. All he did was rummage through the contents of his glove compartment.

“I was clever enough not to carry anything of value in there. That’s what he was looking for.”

But Dahl is worried about how the thief got in so lightly.

“You used to have a wire that you slipped down the window, when it was mechanical. But now it’s electronic.”

Cases like this are becoming more common across the region.

Lars Carlson says the man who broke into his car in January also appeared to be carrying something in a backpack.

“It’s running through codes automatically or it’s a button they’re pushing or something is happening. But whatever it does, it seems to trick the car into thinking he’s got the legitimate keys.”

Seattle police say they don’t know exactly what kind of device thieves are using, or how it works. But they are worried.

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

Dahl says automakers need to do something to give people a little more security. But until that happens, he’s going to share this movie with as many neighbors as he can.

“I hope other people pay attention, make sure things are secure and locked, and don’t keep things in your car that are of any value.”

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

thirty two comments

Slam1263 (@IKnowBO)

It is just a random code transmitter.

They can transmit a million codes with the shove of a button.

Tow truck driver have been using them for over twenty years.

Don’t the receivers limit the number of failed attempts per 2nd?

Sadly No they don’t

Rodger Wolkins

They need to emit a cloud of pepper burst after three failed attempts.

Fresh Boy

Then cars in parking lots would permanently be admitting pepper splash, in a parking lot hundreds of remote keys are used permanently, so it has to be able to see signals without assuming it is failed attempts. They need to increase the complexity of the codes, add more bits, make it too hard to crack.

ashford
lionfan

Can most likely take the entire damn car if it uses keyless ignition, right?

Testicules

For most cars, the thief would still have to deal with the mechanical steering lock that is released by the mechanical portion of the key.

As for some cars that now have keyless shove button begin features… ?

clovellstc

The car permanently scans for the key. Since this is very likely just a device and sends out a bunch of signals in a row he wouldn’t know which one was for the car, so I doubt it would work on the ignition.

Phillip Coiner

I know how they are doing it. Have the cops send me an e-mail

john Bowler

See a classic Forrest Whitaker film “Ghost Dog”. The hero uses one of those code generators to steal luxury cars.

So, They may steal them from Tow Truck Drivers?

Tester

The device works by “pinging” the FOB on the key chain which, in turn, generates a signal to the vehicle. The device only works when the keys are within operational range of the vehicle.

Frank

This techbology isn’t fresh, over a decade old if anything. They demonstrated this in the movie, ‘Gone in sixty Seconds’.

Device is available on aliexpress from china for $600 or less. Clones key fobs and can transmit them. It’s not a mystery.

Thats not how they work. You need access to the original keys and the car to make a clone.

Most people keep their registration and garage door opener in their car. If a thief sees you leave your vehicle in a parking lot and can access your car this way, he can go to your home and rob it while you’re shopping or standing in the parking lot wondering where your car is.

Dan Darius

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

It’s a shame that cops are always reactive instead of proactive.

Dan Darius
Dee Ouchman

It’s a elementary Tesla coil which energised the door lock/unlock servo.

Justa Joe

I don’t need a fresh car that badly. My two thousand five Ford Concentrate has manual (mechanical) doorlocks, manual (forearm crank) windows, and a 5-speed manual transmission. Its also carrying 275,000 miles on the odometer.

I’m in no fear of anyone attempting to steal my wheels.

Marc M

Yes, we have the exact same car – two thousand five Ford Concentrate. Looks like a ruddy ordnance vehicle, but I like it because it has NOTHING (except AC). Manual trans, windows, everything. And a freakin’ metal key. I do not like this fresh crap. “The more the over-think the plumbing, the lighter it is to stop up the drain,” in the words of Scotty. And every journey to the stealership to fix the over-thought under-engineered geek fucktoys is an exercise on your wallet.

This is finish rubbish. The rolling code protocol (keyloq) used by keyless entry will only permit two hundred fifty six code attempts before the original key will need to be reset. This is a hoax.

George Johnson

Evidently the cops are NOT one step ahead of the criminals.

Starheart

There are too many COPS that ARE the CRIMINALS OUT THERE.

pithypaul

The thief is going to sue for invasion of his own privacy, as nobody asked him for permission to use his pic. Hey, this is Amerika.

SMARTERTHANYOU

Wow.. these reporters, especially the police department, are frankly imbeciles! The technology is over a decade old, it’s called a laptop and a receiver.

Starheart

Homeland Security Personnel are using very advanced electronic technology to hack into everything now.

People like Kay Griggs, Michael Hastings, Phillip Marshall, Judi Bari and myself have been targeted by some of these these special ops Homeland Security personnel involved in criminal operations in the US. They have been promoting and rewarding war criminals for years from the CIA and Military Black Sites and Torment Facilities, into Homeland Security, FBI, Law Enforcement, and other government agencies across the country, to target citizens for surveillance and crimes.

(See Kay Griggs movies on you tube, as she gives her testimonial for what has been going on for a long time now.)

Since 2011, I’ve been targeted for surveillance burglaries, vandalism, pet torment, vehicle tampering as well as the planting of stolen and unknown origin property and malicious prosecution. My safe deposit box in, Colville, WA ,was even burglarized. I can’t find any organization to help me, out of the dozens and dozens of civil and constitutional rights organizations and attorneys I’ve contacted. I had to get a private investigator to trace license plates and find out who some of the people involved in these targeted black operations are.

I can’t get my FOIA Requests fulfilled for information on my surveillance “Watch List” targeted crimes and it’s even common skill in Washington state that Homeland Security personnel are involved in my targeted surveillance and gang stalking crimes. There has even been one out of court settlement in one case in the Seattle area for these criminal activities by Homeland Security Personnel.

My cruise control stopped working on my one hundred forty mile excursion back from Spokane WA, on Thursday February 26th (about two weeks ago), and I was gang stalked on the road by numerous vehicles (one of them with a Big Transformer Decal on the Back Window, one with a Big US “Infantry” sticker on his back window, as well as by WA license plate # WEPLAY2) and after they all turned off and I got past Colville, WA, I attempted my cruise control again and it commenced working. I know they have had remote control over my car alarms on my vehicles for a long time now, and it looks to me that they can also remote control my cruise control as well now……

They have been using FOIA DENIALS, FOIA APPEAL DENIALS, GAG ORDERS, NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS AND EVEN – “CLASSIFYING” INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COVER UP THEIR CRIMES AGAINST TARGETED INDIVIDUALS, ACTIVISTS AND JOURNALISTS.

Witness: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car, Q13 FOX News

Observe: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car

SEATTLE — A West Seattle man is sharing a surveillance movie that shows the scaring way thieves are using technology to break into cars.

Witness the movie as a man approaches Tom Dahl’s truck in this driveway. He attempts the treat, but the door is locked. So he takes off his backpack, moves it close to the window. Seconds later, he’s able to get inwards.

Photo Gallery

“He opens the door up,” says Dahl. “The lights went on, it was disarmed.”

Dahl is glad the thief didn’t take his truck. All he did was rummage through the contents of his glove compartment.

“I was clever enough not to carry anything of value in there. That’s what he was looking for.”

But Dahl is worried about how the thief got in so lightly.

“You used to have a wire that you glided down the window, when it was mechanical. But now it’s electronic.”

Cases like this are becoming more common across the region.

Lars Carlson says the man who broke into his car in January also appeared to be carrying something in a backpack.

“It’s running through codes automatically or it’s a button they’re pushing or something is happening. But whatever it does, it seems to trick the car into thinking he’s got the legitimate keys.”

Seattle police say they don’t know exactly what kind of device thieves are using, or how it works. But they are worried.

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

Dahl says automakers need to do something to give people a little more security. But until that happens, he’s going to share this movie with as many neighbors as he can.

“I hope other people pay attention, make sure things are secure and locked, and don’t keep things in your car that are of any value.”

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

thirty two comments

Slam1263 (@IKnowBO)

It is just a random code transmitter.

They can transmit a million codes with the shove of a button.

Tow truck driver have been using them for over twenty years.

Don’t the receivers limit the number of failed attempts per 2nd?

Sadly No they don’t

Rodger Wolkins

They need to emit a cloud of pepper unload after three failed attempts.

Fresh Fellow

Then cars in parking lots would permanently be admitting pepper splash, in a parking lot hundreds of remote keys are used permanently, so it has to be able to see signals without assuming it is failed attempts. They need to increase the complexity of the codes, add more bits, make it too hard to crack.

ashford
lionfan

Can most likely take the entire damn car if it uses keyless ignition, right?

Testicules

For most cars, the thief would still have to deal with the mechanical steering lock that is released by the mechanical portion of the key.

As for some cars that now have keyless thrust button begin features… ?

clovellstc

The car permanently scans for the key. Since this is most likely just a device and sends out a bunch of signals in a row he wouldn’t know which one was for the car, so I doubt it would work on the ignition.

Phillip Coiner

I know how they are doing it. Have the cops send me an e-mail

john Bowler

See a classic Forrest Whitaker film “Ghost Dog”. The hero uses one of those code generators to steal luxury cars.

So, They may steal them from Tow Truck Drivers?

Tester

The device works by “pinging” the FOB on the key chain which, in turn, generates a signal to the vehicle. The device only works when the keys are within operational range of the vehicle.

Frank

This techbology isn’t fresh, over a decade old if anything. They demonstrated this in the movie, ‘Gone in sixty Seconds’.

Device is available on aliexpress from china for $600 or less. Clones key fobs and can transmit them. It’s not a mystery.

Thats not how they work. You need access to the original keys and the car to make a clone.

Most people keep their registration and garage door opener in their car. If a thief observes you leave your vehicle in a parking lot and can access your car this way, he can go to your home and rob it while you’re shopping or standing in the parking lot wondering where your car is.

Dan Darius

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

It’s a shame that cops are always reactive instead of proactive.

Dan Darius
Dee Ouchman

It’s a plain Tesla coil which energised the door lock/unlock servo.

Justa Joe

I don’t need a fresh car that badly. My two thousand five Ford Concentrate has manual (mechanical) doorlocks, manual (forearm crank) windows, and a 5-speed manual transmission. Its also carrying 275,000 miles on the odometer.

I’m in no fear of anyone attempting to steal my wheels.

Marc M

Yes, we have the exact same car – two thousand five Ford Concentrate. Looks like a ruddy ordnance vehicle, but I like it because it has NOTHING (except AC). Manual trans, windows, everything. And a freakin’ metal key. I do not like this fresh crap. “The more the over-think the plumbing, the lighter it is to stop up the drain,” in the words of Scotty. And every excursion to the stealership to fix the over-thought under-engineered geek fucktoys is an exercise on your wallet.

This is accomplish rubbish. The rolling code protocol (keyloq) used by keyless entry will only permit two hundred fifty six code attempts before the original key will need to be reset. This is a hoax.

George Johnson

Evidently the cops are NOT one step ahead of the criminals.

Starheart

There are too many COPS that ARE the CRIMINALS OUT THERE.

pithypaul

The thief is going to sue for invasion of his own privacy, as nobody asked him for permission to use his pic. Hey, this is Amerika.

SMARTERTHANYOU

Wow.. these reporters, especially the police department, are frankly imbeciles! The technology is over a decade old, it’s called a laptop and a receiver.

Starheart

Homeland Security Personnel are using very advanced electronic technology to hack into everything now.

People like Kay Griggs, Michael Hastings, Phillip Marshall, Judi Bari and myself have been targeted by some of these these special ops Homeland Security personnel involved in criminal operations in the US. They have been promoting and rewarding war criminals for years from the CIA and Military Black Sites and Torment Facilities, into Homeland Security, FBI, Law Enforcement, and other government agencies across the country, to target citizens for surveillance and crimes.

(Witness Kay Griggs movies on you tube, as she gives her testimonial for what has been going on for a long time now.)

Since 2011, I’ve been targeted for surveillance burglaries, vandalism, pet torment, vehicle tampering as well as the planting of stolen and unknown origin property and malicious prosecution. My safe deposit box in, Colville, WA ,was even burglarized. I can’t find any organization to help me, out of the dozens and dozens of civil and constitutional rights organizations and attorneys I’ve contacted. I had to get a private investigator to trace license plates and find out who some of the people involved in these targeted black operations are.

I can’t get my FOIA Requests fulfilled for information on my surveillance “Watch List” targeted crimes and it’s even common skill in Washington state that Homeland Security personnel are involved in my targeted surveillance and gang stalking crimes. There has even been one out of court settlement in one case in the Seattle area for these criminal activities by Homeland Security Personnel.

My cruise control stopped working on my one hundred forty mile excursion back from Spokane WA, on Thursday February 26th (about two weeks ago), and I was gang stalked on the road by numerous vehicles (one of them with a Big Transformer Decal on the Back Window, one with a Big US “Infantry” sticker on his back window, as well as by WA license plate # WEPLAY2) and after they all turned off and I got past Colville, WA, I attempted my cruise control again and it began working. I know they have had remote control over my car alarms on my vehicles for a long time now, and it looks to me that they can also remote control my cruise control as well now……

They have been using FOIA DENIALS, FOIA APPEAL DENIALS, GAG ORDERS, NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS AND EVEN – “CLASSIFYING” INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COVER UP THEIR CRIMES AGAINST TARGETED INDIVIDUALS, ACTIVISTS AND JOURNALISTS.

Observe: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car, Q13 FOX News

Witness: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car

SEATTLE — A West Seattle man is sharing a surveillance movie that shows the panicking way thieves are using technology to break into cars.

Observe the movie as a man approaches Tom Dahl’s truck in this driveway. He attempts the treat, but the door is locked. So he takes off his backpack, moves it close to the window. Seconds later, he’s able to get inwards.

Photo Gallery

“He opens the door up,” says Dahl. “The lights went on, it was disarmed.”

Dahl is glad the thief didn’t take his truck. All he did was rummage through the contents of his glove compartment.

“I was clever enough not to carry anything of value in there. That’s what he was looking for.”

But Dahl is worried about how the thief got in so lightly.

“You used to have a wire that you glided down the window, when it was mechanical. But now it’s electronic.”

Cases like this are becoming more common across the region.

Lars Carlson says the man who broke into his car in January also appeared to be carrying something in a backpack.

“It’s running through codes automatically or it’s a button they’re pushing or something is happening. But whatever it does, it seems to trick the car into thinking he’s got the legitimate keys.”

Seattle police say they don’t know exactly what kind of device thieves are using, or how it works. But they are worried.

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

Dahl says automakers need to do something to give people a little more security. But until that happens, he’s going to share this movie with as many neighbors as he can.

“I hope other people pay attention, make sure things are secure and locked, and don’t keep things in your car that are of any value.”

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

thirty two comments

Slam1263 (@IKnowBO)

It is just a random code transmitter.

They can transmit a million codes with the shove of a button.

Tow truck driver have been using them for over twenty years.

Don’t the receivers limit the number of failed attempts per 2nd?

Sadly No they don’t

Rodger Wolkins

They need to emit a cloud of pepper squirt after three failed attempts.

Fresh Boy

Then cars in parking lots would permanently be admitting pepper sploog, in a parking lot hundreds of remote keys are used permanently, so it has to be able to see signals without assuming it is failed attempts. They need to increase the complexity of the codes, add more bits, make it too hard to crack.

ashford
lionfan

Can very likely take the entire damn car if it uses keyless ignition, right?

Testicules

For most cars, the thief would still have to deal with the mechanical steering lock that is released by the mechanical portion of the key.

As for some cars that now have keyless shove button begin features… ?

clovellstc

The car permanently scans for the key. Since this is most likely just a device and sends out a bunch of signals in a row he wouldn’t know which one was for the car, so I doubt it would work on the ignition.

Phillip Coiner

I know how they are doing it. Have the cops send me an e-mail

john Bowler

Observe a classic Forrest Whitaker film “Ghost Dog”. The hero uses one of those code generators to steal luxury cars.

So, They may steal them from Tow Truck Drivers?

Tester

The device works by “pinging” the FOB on the key chain which, in turn, generates a signal to the vehicle. The device only works when the keys are within operational range of the vehicle.

Frank

This techbology isn’t fresh, over a decade old if anything. They demonstrated this in the movie, ‘Gone in sixty Seconds’.

Device is available on aliexpress from china for $600 or less. Clones key fobs and can transmit them. It’s not a mystery.

Thats not how they work. You need access to the original keys and the car to make a clone.

Most people keep their registration and garage door opener in their car. If a thief sees you leave your vehicle in a parking lot and can access your car this way, he can go to your home and rob it while you’re shopping or standing in the parking lot wondering where your car is.

Dan Darius

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

It’s a shame that cops are always reactive instead of proactive.

Dan Darius
Dee Ouchman

It’s a elementary Tesla coil which energised the door lock/unlock servo.

Justa Joe

I don’t need a fresh car that badly. My two thousand five Ford Concentrate has manual (mechanical) doorlocks, manual (forearm crank) windows, and a 5-speed manual transmission. Its also carrying 275,000 miles on the odometer.

I’m in no fear of anyone attempting to steal my wheels.

Marc M

Yes, we have the exact same car – two thousand five Ford Concentrate. Looks like a ruddy ordnance vehicle, but I like it because it has NOTHING (except AC). Manual trans, windows, everything. And a freakin’ metal key. I do not like this fresh crap. “The more the over-think the plumbing, the lighter it is to stop up the drain,” in the words of Scotty. And every journey to the stealership to fix the over-thought under-engineered geek fucktoys is an exercise on your wallet.

This is accomplish rubbish. The rolling code protocol (keyloq) used by keyless entry will only permit two hundred fifty six code attempts before the original key will need to be reset. This is a hoax.

George Johnson

Evidently the cops are NOT one step ahead of the criminals.

Starheart

There are too many COPS that ARE the CRIMINALS OUT THERE.

pithypaul

The thief is going to sue for invasion of his own privacy, as nobody asked him for permission to use his photo. Hey, this is Amerika.

SMARTERTHANYOU

Wow.. these reporters, especially the police department, are frankly imbeciles! The technology is over a decade old, it’s called a laptop and a receiver.

Starheart

Homeland Security Personnel are using very advanced electronic technology to hack into everything now.

People like Kay Griggs, Michael Hastings, Phillip Marshall, Judi Bari and myself have been targeted by some of these these special ops Homeland Security personnel involved in criminal operations in the US. They have been promoting and rewarding war criminals for years from the CIA and Military Black Sites and Torment Facilities, into Homeland Security, FBI, Law Enforcement, and other government agencies across the country, to target citizens for surveillance and crimes.

(Witness Kay Griggs movies on you tube, as she gives her testimonial for what has been going on for a long time now.)

Since 2011, I’ve been targeted for surveillance burglaries, vandalism, pet torment, vehicle tampering as well as the planting of stolen and unknown origin property and malicious prosecution. My safe deposit box in, Colville, WA ,was even burglarized. I can’t find any organization to help me, out of the dozens and dozens of civil and constitutional rights organizations and attorneys I’ve contacted. I had to get a private investigator to trace license plates and find out who some of the people involved in these targeted black operations are.

I can’t get my FOIA Requests fulfilled for information on my surveillance “Watch List” targeted crimes and it’s even common skill in Washington state that Homeland Security personnel are involved in my targeted surveillance and gang stalking crimes. There has even been one out of court settlement in one case in the Seattle area for these criminal activities by Homeland Security Personnel.

My cruise control stopped working on my one hundred forty mile journey back from Spokane WA, on Thursday February 26th (about two weeks ago), and I was gang stalked on the road by numerous vehicles (one of them with a Big Transformer Decal on the Back Window, one with a Big US “Infantry” sticker on his back window, as well as by WA license plate # WEPLAY2) and after they all turned off and I got past Colville, WA, I attempted my cruise control again and it began working. I know they have had remote control over my car alarms on my vehicles for a long time now, and it looks to me that they can also remote control my cruise control as well now……

They have been using FOIA DENIALS, FOIA APPEAL DENIALS, GAG ORDERS, NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS AND EVEN – “CLASSIFYING” INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COVER UP THEIR CRIMES AGAINST TARGETED INDIVIDUALS, ACTIVISTS AND JOURNALISTS.

Observe: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car, Q13 FOX News

See: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car

SEATTLE — A West Seattle man is sharing a surveillance movie that shows the scaring way thieves are using technology to break into cars.

See the movie as a man approaches Tom Dahl’s truck in this driveway. He attempts the treat, but the door is locked. So he takes off his backpack, moves it close to the window. Seconds later, he’s able to get inwards.

Photo Gallery

“He opens the door up,” says Dahl. “The lights went on, it was disarmed.”

Dahl is glad the thief didn’t take his truck. All he did was rummage through the contents of his glove compartment.

“I was clever enough not to carry anything of value in there. That’s what he was looking for.”

But Dahl is worried about how the thief got in so lightly.

“You used to have a wire that you slipped down the window, when it was mechanical. But now it’s electronic.”

Cases like this are becoming more common across the region.

Lars Carlson says the man who broke into his car in January also appeared to be carrying something in a backpack.

“It’s running through codes automatically or it’s a button they’re pushing or something is happening. But whatever it does, it seems to trick the car into thinking he’s got the legitimate keys.”

Seattle police say they don’t know exactly what kind of device thieves are using, or how it works. But they are worried.

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

Dahl says automakers need to do something to give people a little more security. But until that happens, he’s going to share this movie with as many neighbors as he can.

“I hope other people pay attention, make sure things are secure and locked, and don’t keep things in your car that are of any value.”

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

thirty two comments

Slam1263 (@IKnowBO)

It is just a random code transmitter.

They can transmit a million codes with the thrust of a button.

Tow truck driver have been using them for over twenty years.

Don’t the receivers limit the number of failed attempts per 2nd?

Sadly No they don’t

Rodger Wolkins

They need to emit a cloud of pepper splatter after three failed attempts.

Fresh Fellow

Then cars in parking lots would permanently be admitting pepper burst, in a parking lot hundreds of remote keys are used permanently, so it has to be able to see signals without assuming it is failed attempts. They need to increase the complexity of the codes, add more bits, make it too hard to crack.

ashford
lionfan

Can very likely take the entire damn car if it uses keyless ignition, right?

Testicules

For most cars, the thief would still have to deal with the mechanical steering lock that is released by the mechanical portion of the key.

As for some cars that now have keyless thrust button embark features… ?

clovellstc

The car permanently scans for the key. Since this is very likely just a device and sends out a bunch of signals in a row he wouldn’t know which one was for the car, so I doubt it would work on the ignition.

Phillip Coiner

I know how they are doing it. Have the cops send me an e-mail

john Bowler

Observe a classic Forrest Whitaker film “Ghost Dog”. The hero uses one of those code generators to steal luxury cars.

So, They may steal them from Tow Truck Drivers?

Tester

The device works by “pinging” the FOB on the key chain which, in turn, generates a signal to the vehicle. The device only works when the keys are within operational range of the vehicle.

Frank

This techbology isn’t fresh, over a decade old if anything. They demonstrated this in the movie, ‘Gone in sixty Seconds’.

Device is available on aliexpress from china for $600 or less. Clones key fobs and can transmit them. It’s not a mystery.

Thats not how they work. You need access to the original keys and the car to make a clone.

Most people keep their registration and garage door opener in their car. If a thief sees you leave your vehicle in a parking lot and can access your car this way, he can go to your home and rob it while you’re shopping or standing in the parking lot wondering where your car is.

Dan Darius

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

It’s a shame that cops are always reactive instead of proactive.

Dan Darius
Dee Ouchman

It’s a elementary Tesla coil which energised the door lock/unlock servo.

Justa Joe

I don’t need a fresh car that badly. My two thousand five Ford Concentrate has manual (mechanical) doorlocks, manual (forearm crank) windows, and a 5-speed manual transmission. Its also carrying 275,000 miles on the odometer.

I’m in no fear of anyone attempting to steal my wheels.

Marc M

Yes, we have the exact same car – two thousand five Ford Concentrate. Looks like a ruddy ordnance vehicle, but I like it because it has NOTHING (except AC). Manual trans, windows, everything. And a freakin’ metal key. I do not like this fresh crap. “The more the over-think the plumbing, the lighter it is to stop up the drain,” in the words of Scotty. And every journey to the stealership to fix the over-thought under-engineered geek fucktoys is an exercise on your wallet.

This is accomplish rubbish. The rolling code protocol (keyloq) used by keyless entry will only permit two hundred fifty six code attempts before the original key will need to be reset. This is a hoax.

George Johnson

Evidently the cops are NOT one step ahead of the criminals.

Starheart

There are too many COPS that ARE the CRIMINALS OUT THERE.

pithypaul

The thief is going to sue for invasion of his own privacy, as nobody asked him for permission to use his picture. Hey, this is Amerika.

SMARTERTHANYOU

Wow.. these reporters, especially the police department, are frankly imbeciles! The technology is over a decade old, it’s called a laptop and a receiver.

Starheart

Homeland Security Personnel are using very advanced electronic technology to hack into everything now.

People like Kay Griggs, Michael Hastings, Phillip Marshall, Judi Bari and myself have been targeted by some of these these special ops Homeland Security personnel involved in criminal operations in the US. They have been promoting and rewarding war criminals for years from the CIA and Military Black Sites and Torment Facilities, into Homeland Security, FBI, Law Enforcement, and other government agencies across the country, to target citizens for surveillance and crimes.

(See Kay Griggs movies on you tube, as she gives her testimonial for what has been going on for a long time now.)

Since 2011, I’ve been targeted for surveillance burglaries, vandalism, pet torment, vehicle tampering as well as the planting of stolen and unknown origin property and malicious prosecution. My safe deposit box in, Colville, WA ,was even burglarized. I can’t find any organization to help me, out of the dozens and dozens of civil and constitutional rights organizations and attorneys I’ve contacted. I had to get a private investigator to trace license plates and find out who some of the people involved in these targeted black operations are.

I can’t get my FOIA Requests fulfilled for information on my surveillance “Watch List” targeted crimes and it’s even common skill in Washington state that Homeland Security personnel are involved in my targeted surveillance and gang stalking crimes. There has even been one out of court settlement in one case in the Seattle area for these criminal activities by Homeland Security Personnel.

My cruise control stopped working on my one hundred forty mile tour back from Spokane WA, on Thursday February 26th (about two weeks ago), and I was gang stalked on the road by numerous vehicles (one of them with a Big Transformer Decal on the Back Window, one with a Big US “Infantry” sticker on his back window, as well as by WA license plate # WEPLAY2) and after they all turned off and I got past Colville, WA, I attempted my cruise control again and it began working. I know they have had remote control over my car alarms on my vehicles for a long time now, and it looks to me that they can also remote control my cruise control as well now……

They have been using FOIA DENIALS, FOIA APPEAL DENIALS, GAG ORDERS, NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS AND EVEN – “CLASSIFYING” INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COVER UP THEIR CRIMES AGAINST TARGETED INDIVIDUALS, ACTIVISTS AND JOURNALISTS.

See: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car, Q13 FOX News

Witness: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car

SEATTLE — A West Seattle man is sharing a surveillance movie that shows the scaring way thieves are using technology to break into cars.

Observe the movie as a man approaches Tom Dahl’s truck in this driveway. He attempts the treat, but the door is locked. So he takes off his backpack, moves it close to the window. Seconds later, he’s able to get inwards.

Photo Gallery

“He opens the door up,” says Dahl. “The lights went on, it was disarmed.”

Dahl is glad the thief didn’t take his truck. All he did was rummage through the contents of his glove compartment.

“I was clever enough not to carry anything of value in there. That’s what he was looking for.”

But Dahl is worried about how the thief got in so lightly.

“You used to have a wire that you glided down the window, when it was mechanical. But now it’s electronic.”

Cases like this are becoming more common across the region.

Lars Carlson says the man who broke into his car in January also appeared to be carrying something in a backpack.

“It’s running through codes automatically or it’s a button they’re pushing or something is happening. But whatever it does, it seems to trick the car into thinking he’s got the legitimate keys.”

Seattle police say they don’t know exactly what kind of device thieves are using, or how it works. But they are worried.

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

Dahl says automakers need to do something to give people a little more security. But until that happens, he’s going to share this movie with as many neighbors as he can.

“I hope other people pay attention, make sure things are secure and locked, and don’t keep things in your car that are of any value.”

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

thirty two comments

Slam1263 (@IKnowBO)

It is just a random code transmitter.

They can transmit a million codes with the shove of a button.

Tow truck driver have been using them for over twenty years.

Don’t the receivers limit the number of failed attempts per 2nd?

Sadly No they don’t

Rodger Wolkins

They need to emit a cloud of pepper splash after three failed attempts.

Fresh Man

Then cars in parking lots would permanently be admitting pepper dump, in a parking lot hundreds of remote keys are used permanently, so it has to be able to see signals without assuming it is failed attempts. They need to increase the complexity of the codes, add more bits, make it too hard to crack.

ashford
lionfan

Can most likely take the entire damn car if it uses keyless ignition, right?

Testicules

For most cars, the thief would still have to deal with the mechanical steering lock that is released by the mechanical portion of the key.

As for some cars that now have keyless thrust button embark features… ?

clovellstc

The car permanently scans for the key. Since this is very likely just a device and sends out a bunch of signals in a row he wouldn’t know which one was for the car, so I doubt it would work on the ignition.

Phillip Coiner

I know how they are doing it. Have the cops send me an e-mail

john Bowler

Observe a classic Forrest Whitaker film “Ghost Dog”. The hero uses one of those code generators to steal luxury cars.

So, They may steal them from Tow Truck Drivers?

Tester

The device works by “pinging” the FOB on the key chain which, in turn, generates a signal to the vehicle. The device only works when the keys are within operational range of the vehicle.

Frank

This techbology isn’t fresh, over a decade old if anything. They demonstrated this in the movie, ‘Gone in sixty Seconds’.

Device is available on aliexpress from china for $600 or less. Clones key fobs and can transmit them. It’s not a mystery.

Thats not how they work. You need access to the original keys and the car to make a clone.

Most people keep their registration and garage door opener in their car. If a thief witnesses you leave your vehicle in a parking lot and can access your car this way, he can go to your home and rob it while you’re shopping or standing in the parking lot wondering where your car is.

Dan Darius

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

It’s a shame that cops are always reactive instead of proactive.

Dan Darius
Dee Ouchman

It’s a elementary Tesla coil which energised the door lock/unlock servo.

Justa Joe

I don’t need a fresh car that badly. My two thousand five Ford Concentrate has manual (mechanical) doorlocks, manual (mitt crank) windows, and a 5-speed manual transmission. Its also carrying 275,000 miles on the odometer.

I’m in no fear of anyone attempting to steal my wheels.

Marc M

Yes, we have the exact same car – two thousand five Ford Concentrate. Looks like a ruddy ordnance vehicle, but I like it because it has NOTHING (except AC). Manual trans, windows, everything. And a freakin’ metal key. I do not like this fresh crap. “The more the over-think the plumbing, the lighter it is to stop up the drain,” in the words of Scotty. And every tour to the stealership to fix the over-thought under-engineered geek fucktoys is an exercise on your wallet.

This is accomplish rubbish. The rolling code protocol (keyloq) used by keyless entry will only permit two hundred fifty six code attempts before the original key will need to be reset. This is a hoax.

George Johnson

Evidently the cops are NOT one step ahead of the criminals.

Starheart

There are too many COPS that ARE the CRIMINALS OUT THERE.

pithypaul

The thief is going to sue for invasion of his own privacy, as nobody asked him for permission to use his photo. Hey, this is Amerika.

SMARTERTHANYOU

Wow.. these reporters, especially the police department, are frankly imbeciles! The technology is over a decade old, it’s called a laptop and a receiver.

Starheart

Homeland Security Personnel are using very advanced electronic technology to hack into everything now.

People like Kay Griggs, Michael Hastings, Phillip Marshall, Judi Bari and myself have been targeted by some of these these special ops Homeland Security personnel involved in criminal operations in the US. They have been promoting and rewarding war criminals for years from the CIA and Military Black Sites and Torment Facilities, into Homeland Security, FBI, Law Enforcement, and other government agencies across the country, to target citizens for surveillance and crimes.

(Observe Kay Griggs movies on you tube, as she gives her testimonial for what has been going on for a long time now.)

Since 2011, I’ve been targeted for surveillance burglaries, vandalism, pet torment, vehicle tampering as well as the planting of stolen and unknown origin property and malicious prosecution. My safe deposit box in, Colville, WA ,was even burglarized. I can’t find any organization to help me, out of the dozens and dozens of civil and constitutional rights organizations and attorneys I’ve contacted. I had to get a private investigator to trace license plates and find out who some of the people involved in these targeted black operations are.

I can’t get my FOIA Requests fulfilled for information on my surveillance “Watch List” targeted crimes and it’s even common skill in Washington state that Homeland Security personnel are involved in my targeted surveillance and gang stalking crimes. There has even been one out of court settlement in one case in the Seattle area for these criminal activities by Homeland Security Personnel.

My cruise control stopped working on my one hundred forty mile journey back from Spokane WA, on Thursday February 26th (about two weeks ago), and I was gang stalked on the road by numerous vehicles (one of them with a Big Transformer Decal on the Back Window, one with a Big US “Infantry” sticker on his back window, as well as by WA license plate # WEPLAY2) and after they all turned off and I got past Colville, WA, I attempted my cruise control again and it embarked working. I know they have had remote control over my car alarms on my vehicles for a long time now, and it looks to me that they can also remote control my cruise control as well now……

They have been using FOIA DENIALS, FOIA APPEAL DENIALS, GAG ORDERS, NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS AND EVEN – “CLASSIFYING” INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COVER UP THEIR CRIMES AGAINST TARGETED INDIVIDUALS, ACTIVISTS AND JOURNALISTS.

See: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car, Q13 FOX News

Witness: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car

SEATTLE — A West Seattle man is sharing a surveillance movie that shows the scaring way thieves are using technology to break into cars.

See the movie as a man approaches Tom Dahl’s truck in this driveway. He attempts the treat, but the door is locked. So he takes off his backpack, moves it close to the window. Seconds later, he’s able to get inwards.

Photo Gallery

“He opens the door up,” says Dahl. “The lights went on, it was disarmed.”

Dahl is glad the thief didn’t take his truck. All he did was rummage through the contents of his glove compartment.

“I was clever enough not to carry anything of value in there. That’s what he was looking for.”

But Dahl is worried about how the thief got in so lightly.

“You used to have a wire that you glided down the window, when it was mechanical. But now it’s electronic.”

Cases like this are becoming more common across the region.

Lars Carlson says the man who broke into his car in January also appeared to be carrying something in a backpack.

“It’s running through codes automatically or it’s a button they’re pushing or something is happening. But whatever it does, it seems to trick the car into thinking he’s got the legitimate keys.”

Seattle police say they don’t know exactly what kind of device thieves are using, or how it works. But they are worried.

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

Dahl says automakers need to do something to give people a little more security. But until that happens, he’s going to share this movie with as many neighbors as he can.

“I hope other people pay attention, make sure things are secure and locked, and don’t keep things in your car that are of any value.”

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

thirty two comments

Slam1263 (@IKnowBO)

It is just a random code transmitter.

They can transmit a million codes with the shove of a button.

Tow truck driver have been using them for over twenty years.

Don’t the receivers limit the number of failed attempts per 2nd?

Sadly No they don’t

Rodger Wolkins

They need to emit a cloud of pepper sploog after three failed attempts.

Fresh Boy

Then cars in parking lots would permanently be admitting pepper squirt, in a parking lot hundreds of remote keys are used permanently, so it has to be able to see signals without assuming it is failed attempts. They need to increase the complexity of the codes, add more bits, make it too hard to crack.

ashford
lionfan

Can most likely take the entire damn car if it uses keyless ignition, right?

Testicules

For most cars, the thief would still have to deal with the mechanical steering lock that is released by the mechanical portion of the key.

As for some cars that now have keyless shove button begin features… ?

clovellstc

The car permanently scans for the key. Since this is very likely just a device and sends out a bunch of signals in a row he wouldn’t know which one was for the car, so I doubt it would work on the ignition.

Phillip Coiner

I know how they are doing it. Have the cops send me an e-mail

john Bowler

See a classic Forrest Whitaker film “Ghost Dog”. The hero uses one of those code generators to steal luxury cars.

So, They may steal them from Tow Truck Drivers?

Tester

The device works by “pinging” the FOB on the key chain which, in turn, generates a signal to the vehicle. The device only works when the keys are within operational range of the vehicle.

Frank

This techbology isn’t fresh, over a decade old if anything. They demonstrated this in the movie, ‘Gone in sixty Seconds’.

Device is available on aliexpress from china for $600 or less. Clones key fobs and can transmit them. It’s not a mystery.

Thats not how they work. You need access to the original keys and the car to make a clone.

Most people keep their registration and garage door opener in their car. If a thief witnesses you leave your vehicle in a parking lot and can access your car this way, he can go to your home and rob it while you’re shopping or standing in the parking lot wondering where your car is.

Dan Darius

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

It’s a shame that cops are always reactive instead of proactive.

Dan Darius
Dee Ouchman

It’s a ordinary Tesla coil which energised the door lock/unlock servo.

Justa Joe

I don’t need a fresh car that badly. My two thousand five Ford Concentrate has manual (mechanical) doorlocks, manual (palm crank) windows, and a 5-speed manual transmission. Its also carrying 275,000 miles on the odometer.

I’m in no fear of anyone attempting to steal my wheels.

Marc M

Yes, we have the exact same car – two thousand five Ford Concentrate. Looks like a ruddy ordnance vehicle, but I like it because it has NOTHING (except AC). Manual trans, windows, everything. And a freakin’ metal key. I do not like this fresh crap. “The more the over-think the plumbing, the lighter it is to stop up the drain,” in the words of Scotty. And every tour to the stealership to fix the over-thought under-engineered geek fucktoys is an exercise on your wallet.

This is accomplish rubbish. The rolling code protocol (keyloq) used by keyless entry will only permit two hundred fifty six code attempts before the original key will need to be reset. This is a hoax.

George Johnson

Evidently the cops are NOT one step ahead of the criminals.

Starheart

There are too many COPS that ARE the CRIMINALS OUT THERE.

pithypaul

The thief is going to sue for invasion of his own privacy, as nobody asked him for permission to use his picture. Hey, this is Amerika.

SMARTERTHANYOU

Wow.. these reporters, especially the police department, are frankly imbeciles! The technology is over a decade old, it’s called a laptop and a receiver.

Starheart

Homeland Security Personnel are using very advanced electronic technology to hack into everything now.

People like Kay Griggs, Michael Hastings, Phillip Marshall, Judi Bari and myself have been targeted by some of these these special ops Homeland Security personnel involved in criminal operations in the US. They have been promoting and rewarding war criminals for years from the CIA and Military Black Sites and Torment Facilities, into Homeland Security, FBI, Law Enforcement, and other government agencies across the country, to target citizens for surveillance and crimes.

(See Kay Griggs movies on you tube, as she gives her testimonial for what has been going on for a long time now.)

Since 2011, I’ve been targeted for surveillance burglaries, vandalism, pet torment, vehicle tampering as well as the planting of stolen and unknown origin property and malicious prosecution. My safe deposit box in, Colville, WA ,was even burglarized. I can’t find any organization to help me, out of the dozens and dozens of civil and constitutional rights organizations and attorneys I’ve contacted. I had to get a private investigator to trace license plates and find out who some of the people involved in these targeted black operations are.

I can’t get my FOIA Requests fulfilled for information on my surveillance “Watch List” targeted crimes and it’s even common skill in Washington state that Homeland Security personnel are involved in my targeted surveillance and gang stalking crimes. There has even been one out of court settlement in one case in the Seattle area for these criminal activities by Homeland Security Personnel.

My cruise control stopped working on my one hundred forty mile excursion back from Spokane WA, on Thursday February 26th (about two weeks ago), and I was gang stalked on the road by numerous vehicles (one of them with a Big Transformer Decal on the Back Window, one with a Big US “Infantry” sticker on his back window, as well as by WA license plate # WEPLAY2) and after they all turned off and I got past Colville, WA, I attempted my cruise control again and it embarked working. I know they have had remote control over my car alarms on my vehicles for a long time now, and it looks to me that they can also remote control my cruise control as well now……

They have been using FOIA DENIALS, FOIA APPEAL DENIALS, GAG ORDERS, NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS AND EVEN – “CLASSIFYING” INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COVER UP THEIR CRIMES AGAINST TARGETED INDIVIDUALS, ACTIVISTS AND JOURNALISTS.

Observe: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car, Q13 FOX News

Witness: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car

SEATTLE — A West Seattle man is sharing a surveillance movie that shows the scaring way thieves are using technology to break into cars.

Observe the movie as a man approaches Tom Dahl’s truck in this driveway. He attempts the treat, but the door is locked. So he takes off his backpack, moves it close to the window. Seconds later, he’s able to get inwards.

Photo Gallery

“He opens the door up,” says Dahl. “The lights went on, it was disarmed.”

Dahl is glad the thief didn’t take his truck. All he did was rummage through the contents of his glove compartment.

“I was brainy enough not to carry anything of value in there. That’s what he was looking for.”

But Dahl is worried about how the thief got in so lightly.

“You used to have a wire that you slipped down the window, when it was mechanical. But now it’s electronic.”

Cases like this are becoming more common across the region.

Lars Carlson says the man who broke into his car in January also appeared to be carrying something in a backpack.

“It’s running through codes automatically or it’s a button they’re pushing or something is happening. But whatever it does, it seems to trick the car into thinking he’s got the legitimate keys.”

Seattle police say they don’t know exactly what kind of device thieves are using, or how it works. But they are worried.

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

Dahl says automakers need to do something to give people a little more security. But until that happens, he’s going to share this movie with as many neighbors as he can.

“I hope other people pay attention, make sure things are secure and locked, and don’t keep things in your car that are of any value.”

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

thirty two comments

Slam1263 (@IKnowBO)

It is just a random code transmitter.

They can transmit a million codes with the thrust of a button.

Tow truck driver have been using them for over twenty years.

Don’t the receivers limit the number of failed attempts per 2nd?

Sadly No they don’t

Rodger Wolkins

They need to emit a cloud of pepper dump after three failed attempts.

Fresh Boy

Then cars in parking lots would permanently be admitting pepper squirt, in a parking lot hundreds of remote keys are used permanently, so it has to be able to see signals without assuming it is failed attempts. They need to increase the complexity of the codes, add more bits, make it too hard to crack.

ashford
lionfan

Can most likely take the entire damn car if it uses keyless ignition, right?

Testicules

For most cars, the thief would still have to deal with the mechanical steering lock that is released by the mechanical portion of the key.

As for some cars that now have keyless shove button begin features… ?

clovellstc

The car permanently scans for the key. Since this is most likely just a device and sends out a bunch of signals in a row he wouldn’t know which one was for the car, so I doubt it would work on the ignition.

Phillip Coiner

I know how they are doing it. Have the cops send me an e-mail

john Bowler

Witness a classic Forrest Whitaker film “Ghost Dog”. The hero uses one of those code generators to steal luxury cars.

So, They may steal them from Tow Truck Drivers?

Tester

The device works by “pinging” the FOB on the key chain which, in turn, generates a signal to the vehicle. The device only works when the keys are within operational range of the vehicle.

Frank

This techbology isn’t fresh, over a decade old if anything. They demonstrated this in the movie, ‘Gone in sixty Seconds’.

Device is available on aliexpress from china for $600 or less. Clones key fobs and can transmit them. It’s not a mystery.

Thats not how they work. You need access to the original keys and the car to make a clone.

Most people keep their registration and garage door opener in their car. If a thief witnesses you leave your vehicle in a parking lot and can access your car this way, he can go to your home and rob it while you’re shopping or standing in the parking lot wondering where your car is.

Dan Darius

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

It’s a shame that cops are always reactive instead of proactive.

Dan Darius
Dee Ouchman

It’s a elementary Tesla coil which energised the door lock/unlock servo.

Justa Joe

I don’t need a fresh car that badly. My two thousand five Ford Concentrate has manual (mechanical) doorlocks, manual (arm crank) windows, and a 5-speed manual transmission. Its also carrying 275,000 miles on the odometer.

I’m in no fear of anyone attempting to steal my wheels.

Marc M

Yes, we have the exact same car – two thousand five Ford Concentrate. Looks like a ruddy ordnance vehicle, but I like it because it has NOTHING (except AC). Manual trans, windows, everything. And a freakin’ metal key. I do not like this fresh crap. “The more the over-think the plumbing, the lighter it is to stop up the drain,” in the words of Scotty. And every excursion to the stealership to fix the over-thought under-engineered geek fucktoys is an exercise on your wallet.

This is finish rubbish. The rolling code protocol (keyloq) used by keyless entry will only permit two hundred fifty six code attempts before the original key will need to be reset. This is a hoax.

George Johnson

Evidently the cops are NOT one step ahead of the criminals.

Starheart

There are too many COPS that ARE the CRIMINALS OUT THERE.

pithypaul

The thief is going to sue for invasion of his own privacy, as nobody asked him for permission to use his picture. Hey, this is Amerika.

SMARTERTHANYOU

Wow.. these reporters, especially the police department, are frankly imbeciles! The technology is over a decade old, it’s called a laptop and a receiver.

Starheart

Homeland Security Personnel are using very advanced electronic technology to hack into everything now.

People like Kay Griggs, Michael Hastings, Phillip Marshall, Judi Bari and myself have been targeted by some of these these special ops Homeland Security personnel involved in criminal operations in the US. They have been promoting and rewarding war criminals for years from the CIA and Military Black Sites and Torment Facilities, into Homeland Security, FBI, Law Enforcement, and other government agencies across the country, to target citizens for surveillance and crimes.

(Observe Kay Griggs movies on you tube, as she gives her testimonial for what has been going on for a long time now.)

Since 2011, I’ve been targeted for surveillance burglaries, vandalism, pet torment, vehicle tampering as well as the planting of stolen and unknown origin property and malicious prosecution. My safe deposit box in, Colville, WA ,was even burglarized. I can’t find any organization to help me, out of the dozens and dozens of civil and constitutional rights organizations and attorneys I’ve contacted. I had to get a private investigator to trace license plates and find out who some of the people involved in these targeted black operations are.

I can’t get my FOIA Requests fulfilled for information on my surveillance “Watch List” targeted crimes and it’s even common skill in Washington state that Homeland Security personnel are involved in my targeted surveillance and gang stalking crimes. There has even been one out of court settlement in one case in the Seattle area for these criminal activities by Homeland Security Personnel.

My cruise control stopped working on my one hundred forty mile journey back from Spokane WA, on Thursday February 26th (about two weeks ago), and I was gang stalked on the road by numerous vehicles (one of them with a Big Transformer Decal on the Back Window, one with a Big US “Infantry” sticker on his back window, as well as by WA license plate # WEPLAY2) and after they all turned off and I got past Colville, WA, I attempted my cruise control again and it began working. I know they have had remote control over my car alarms on my vehicles for a long time now, and it looks to me that they can also remote control my cruise control as well now……

They have been using FOIA DENIALS, FOIA APPEAL DENIALS, GAG ORDERS, NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS AND EVEN – “CLASSIFYING” INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COVER UP THEIR CRIMES AGAINST TARGETED INDIVIDUALS, ACTIVISTS AND JOURNALISTS.

See: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car, Q13 FOX News

See: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car

SEATTLE — A West Seattle man is sharing a surveillance movie that shows the scaring way thieves are using technology to break into cars.

See the movie as a man approaches Tom Dahl’s truck in this driveway. He attempts the treat, but the door is locked. So he takes off his backpack, moves it close to the window. Seconds later, he’s able to get inwards.

Photo Gallery

“He opens the door up,” says Dahl. “The lights went on, it was disarmed.”

Dahl is glad the thief didn’t take his truck. All he did was rummage through the contents of his glove compartment.

“I was clever enough not to carry anything of value in there. That’s what he was looking for.”

But Dahl is worried about how the thief got in so lightly.

“You used to have a wire that you slipped down the window, when it was mechanical. But now it’s electronic.”

Cases like this are becoming more common across the region.

Lars Carlson says the man who broke into his car in January also appeared to be carrying something in a backpack.

“It’s running through codes automatically or it’s a button they’re pushing or something is happening. But whatever it does, it seems to trick the car into thinking he’s got the legitimate keys.”

Seattle police say they don’t know exactly what kind of device thieves are using, or how it works. But they are worried.

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

Dahl says automakers need to do something to give people a little more security. But until that happens, he’s going to share this movie with as many neighbors as he can.

“I hope other people pay attention, make sure things are secure and locked, and don’t keep things in your car that are of any value.”

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

thirty two comments

Slam1263 (@IKnowBO)

It is just a random code transmitter.

They can transmit a million codes with the shove of a button.

Tow truck driver have been using them for over twenty years.

Don’t the receivers limit the number of failed attempts per 2nd?

Sadly No they don’t

Rodger Wolkins

They need to emit a cloud of pepper squirt after three failed attempts.

Fresh Man

Then cars in parking lots would permanently be admitting pepper splash, in a parking lot hundreds of remote keys are used permanently, so it has to be able to see signals without assuming it is failed attempts. They need to increase the complexity of the codes, add more bits, make it too hard to crack.

ashford
lionfan

Can very likely take the entire damn car if it uses keyless ignition, right?

Testicules

For most cars, the thief would still have to deal with the mechanical steering lock that is released by the mechanical portion of the key.

As for some cars that now have keyless shove button begin features… ?

clovellstc

The car permanently scans for the key. Since this is very likely just a device and sends out a bunch of signals in a row he wouldn’t know which one was for the car, so I doubt it would work on the ignition.

Phillip Coiner

I know how they are doing it. Have the cops send me an e-mail

john Bowler

Witness a classic Forrest Whitaker film “Ghost Dog”. The hero uses one of those code generators to steal luxury cars.

So, They may steal them from Tow Truck Drivers?

Tester

The device works by “pinging” the FOB on the key chain which, in turn, generates a signal to the vehicle. The device only works when the keys are within operational range of the vehicle.

Frank

This techbology isn’t fresh, over a decade old if anything. They demonstrated this in the movie, ‘Gone in sixty Seconds’.

Device is available on aliexpress from china for $600 or less. Clones key fobs and can transmit them. It’s not a mystery.

Thats not how they work. You need access to the original keys and the car to make a clone.

Most people keep their registration and garage door opener in their car. If a thief sees you leave your vehicle in a parking lot and can access your car this way, he can go to your home and rob it while you’re shopping or standing in the parking lot wondering where your car is.

Dan Darius

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

It’s a shame that cops are always reactive instead of proactive.

Dan Darius
Dee Ouchman

It’s a elementary Tesla coil which energised the door lock/unlock servo.

Justa Joe

I don’t need a fresh car that badly. My two thousand five Ford Concentrate has manual (mechanical) doorlocks, manual (forearm crank) windows, and a 5-speed manual transmission. Its also carrying 275,000 miles on the odometer.

I’m in no fear of anyone attempting to steal my wheels.

Marc M

Yes, we have the exact same car – two thousand five Ford Concentrate. Looks like a ruddy ordnance vehicle, but I like it because it has NOTHING (except AC). Manual trans, windows, everything. And a freakin’ metal key. I do not like this fresh crap. “The more the over-think the plumbing, the lighter it is to stop up the drain,” in the words of Scotty. And every tour to the stealership to fix the over-thought under-engineered geek fucktoys is an exercise on your wallet.

This is finish rubbish. The rolling code protocol (keyloq) used by keyless entry will only permit two hundred fifty six code attempts before the original key will need to be reset. This is a hoax.

George Johnson

Evidently the cops are NOT one step ahead of the criminals.

Starheart

There are too many COPS that ARE the CRIMINALS OUT THERE.

pithypaul

The thief is going to sue for invasion of his own privacy, as nobody asked him for permission to use his picture. Hey, this is Amerika.

SMARTERTHANYOU

Wow.. these reporters, especially the police department, are frankly imbeciles! The technology is over a decade old, it’s called a laptop and a receiver.

Starheart

Homeland Security Personnel are using very advanced electronic technology to hack into everything now.

People like Kay Griggs, Michael Hastings, Phillip Marshall, Judi Bari and myself have been targeted by some of these these special ops Homeland Security personnel involved in criminal operations in the US. They have been promoting and rewarding war criminals for years from the CIA and Military Black Sites and Torment Facilities, into Homeland Security, FBI, Law Enforcement, and other government agencies across the country, to target citizens for surveillance and crimes.

(See Kay Griggs movies on you tube, as she gives her testimonial for what has been going on for a long time now.)

Since 2011, I’ve been targeted for surveillance burglaries, vandalism, pet torment, vehicle tampering as well as the planting of stolen and unknown origin property and malicious prosecution. My safe deposit box in, Colville, WA ,was even burglarized. I can’t find any organization to help me, out of the dozens and dozens of civil and constitutional rights organizations and attorneys I’ve contacted. I had to get a private investigator to trace license plates and find out who some of the people involved in these targeted black operations are.

I can’t get my FOIA Requests fulfilled for information on my surveillance “Watch List” targeted crimes and it’s even common skill in Washington state that Homeland Security personnel are involved in my targeted surveillance and gang stalking crimes. There has even been one out of court settlement in one case in the Seattle area for these criminal activities by Homeland Security Personnel.

My cruise control stopped working on my one hundred forty mile journey back from Spokane WA, on Thursday February 26th (about two weeks ago), and I was gang stalked on the road by numerous vehicles (one of them with a Big Transformer Decal on the Back Window, one with a Big US “Infantry” sticker on his back window, as well as by WA license plate # WEPLAY2) and after they all turned off and I got past Colville, WA, I attempted my cruise control again and it began working. I know they have had remote control over my car alarms on my vehicles for a long time now, and it looks to me that they can also remote control my cruise control as well now……

They have been using FOIA DENIALS, FOIA APPEAL DENIALS, GAG ORDERS, NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS AND EVEN – “CLASSIFYING” INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COVER UP THEIR CRIMES AGAINST TARGETED INDIVIDUALS, ACTIVISTS AND JOURNALISTS.

See: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car, Q13 FOX News

See: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car

SEATTLE — A West Seattle man is sharing a surveillance movie that shows the panicking way thieves are using technology to break into cars.

See the movie as a man approaches Tom Dahl’s truck in this driveway. He attempts the treat, but the door is locked. So he takes off his backpack, moves it close to the window. Seconds later, he’s able to get inwards.

Photo Gallery

“He opens the door up,” says Dahl. “The lights went on, it was disarmed.”

Dahl is glad the thief didn’t take his truck. All he did was rummage through the contents of his glove compartment.

“I was wise enough not to carry anything of value in there. That’s what he was looking for.”

But Dahl is worried about how the thief got in so lightly.

“You used to have a wire that you slipped down the window, when it was mechanical. But now it’s electronic.”

Cases like this are becoming more common across the region.

Lars Carlson says the man who broke into his car in January also appeared to be carrying something in a backpack.

“It’s running through codes automatically or it’s a button they’re pushing or something is happening. But whatever it does, it seems to trick the car into thinking he’s got the legitimate keys.”

Seattle police say they don’t know exactly what kind of device thieves are using, or how it works. But they are worried.

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

Dahl says automakers need to do something to give people a little more security. But until that happens, he’s going to share this movie with as many neighbors as he can.

“I hope other people pay attention, make sure things are secure and locked, and don’t keep things in your car that are of any value.”

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

thirty two comments

Slam1263 (@IKnowBO)

It is just a random code transmitter.

They can transmit a million codes with the thrust of a button.

Tow truck driver have been using them for over twenty years.

Don’t the receivers limit the number of failed attempts per 2nd?

Sadly No they don’t

Rodger Wolkins

They need to emit a cloud of pepper burst after three failed attempts.

Fresh Boy

Then cars in parking lots would permanently be admitting pepper sploog, in a parking lot hundreds of remote keys are used permanently, so it has to be able to see signals without assuming it is failed attempts. They need to increase the complexity of the codes, add more bits, make it too hard to crack.

ashford
lionfan

Can very likely take the entire damn car if it uses keyless ignition, right?

Testicules

For most cars, the thief would still have to deal with the mechanical steering lock that is released by the mechanical portion of the key.

As for some cars that now have keyless thrust button embark features… ?

clovellstc

The car permanently scans for the key. Since this is very likely just a device and sends out a bunch of signals in a row he wouldn’t know which one was for the car, so I doubt it would work on the ignition.

Phillip Coiner

I know how they are doing it. Have the cops send me an e-mail

john Bowler

Observe a classic Forrest Whitaker film “Ghost Dog”. The hero uses one of those code generators to steal luxury cars.

So, They may steal them from Tow Truck Drivers?

Tester

The device works by “pinging” the FOB on the key chain which, in turn, generates a signal to the vehicle. The device only works when the keys are within operational range of the vehicle.

Frank

This techbology isn’t fresh, over a decade old if anything. They demonstrated this in the movie, ‘Gone in sixty Seconds’.

Device is available on aliexpress from china for $600 or less. Clones key fobs and can transmit them. It’s not a mystery.

Thats not how they work. You need access to the original keys and the car to make a clone.

Most people keep their registration and garage door opener in their car. If a thief witnesses you leave your vehicle in a parking lot and can access your car this way, he can go to your home and rob it while you’re shopping or standing in the parking lot wondering where your car is.

Dan Darius

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

It’s a shame that cops are always reactive instead of proactive.

Dan Darius
Dee Ouchman

It’s a ordinary Tesla coil which energised the door lock/unlock servo.

Justa Joe

I don’t need a fresh car that badly. My two thousand five Ford Concentrate has manual (mechanical) doorlocks, manual (arm crank) windows, and a 5-speed manual transmission. Its also carrying 275,000 miles on the odometer.

I’m in no fear of anyone attempting to steal my wheels.

Marc M

Yes, we have the exact same car – two thousand five Ford Concentrate. Looks like a ruddy ordnance vehicle, but I like it because it has NOTHING (except AC). Manual trans, windows, everything. And a freakin’ metal key. I do not like this fresh crap. “The more the over-think the plumbing, the lighter it is to stop up the drain,” in the words of Scotty. And every excursion to the stealership to fix the over-thought under-engineered geek fucktoys is an exercise on your wallet.

This is accomplish rubbish. The rolling code protocol (keyloq) used by keyless entry will only permit two hundred fifty six code attempts before the original key will need to be reset. This is a hoax.

George Johnson

Evidently the cops are NOT one step ahead of the criminals.

Starheart

There are too many COPS that ARE the CRIMINALS OUT THERE.

pithypaul

The thief is going to sue for invasion of his own privacy, as nobody asked him for permission to use his pic. Hey, this is Amerika.

SMARTERTHANYOU

Wow.. these reporters, especially the police department, are frankly imbeciles! The technology is over a decade old, it’s called a laptop and a receiver.

Starheart

Homeland Security Personnel are using very advanced electronic technology to hack into everything now.

People like Kay Griggs, Michael Hastings, Phillip Marshall, Judi Bari and myself have been targeted by some of these these special ops Homeland Security personnel involved in criminal operations in the US. They have been promoting and rewarding war criminals for years from the CIA and Military Black Sites and Torment Facilities, into Homeland Security, FBI, Law Enforcement, and other government agencies across the country, to target citizens for surveillance and crimes.

(Witness Kay Griggs movies on you tube, as she gives her testimonial for what has been going on for a long time now.)

Since 2011, I’ve been targeted for surveillance burglaries, vandalism, pet torment, vehicle tampering as well as the planting of stolen and unknown origin property and malicious prosecution. My safe deposit box in, Colville, WA ,was even burglarized. I can’t find any organization to help me, out of the dozens and dozens of civil and constitutional rights organizations and attorneys I’ve contacted. I had to get a private investigator to trace license plates and find out who some of the people involved in these targeted black operations are.

I can’t get my FOIA Requests fulfilled for information on my surveillance “Watch List” targeted crimes and it’s even common skill in Washington state that Homeland Security personnel are involved in my targeted surveillance and gang stalking crimes. There has even been one out of court settlement in one case in the Seattle area for these criminal activities by Homeland Security Personnel.

My cruise control stopped working on my one hundred forty mile tour back from Spokane WA, on Thursday February 26th (about two weeks ago), and I was gang stalked on the road by numerous vehicles (one of them with a Big Transformer Decal on the Back Window, one with a Big US “Infantry” sticker on his back window, as well as by WA license plate # WEPLAY2) and after they all turned off and I got past Colville, WA, I attempted my cruise control again and it commenced working. I know they have had remote control over my car alarms on my vehicles for a long time now, and it looks to me that they can also remote control my cruise control as well now……

They have been using FOIA DENIALS, FOIA APPEAL DENIALS, GAG ORDERS, NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS AND EVEN – “CLASSIFYING” INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COVER UP THEIR CRIMES AGAINST TARGETED INDIVIDUALS, ACTIVISTS AND JOURNALISTS.

Witness: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car, Q13 FOX News

Witness: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car

SEATTLE — A West Seattle man is sharing a surveillance movie that shows the scaring way thieves are using technology to break into cars.

Witness the movie as a man approaches Tom Dahl’s truck in this driveway. He attempts the treat, but the door is locked. So he takes off his backpack, moves it close to the window. Seconds later, he’s able to get inwards.

Photo Gallery

“He opens the door up,” says Dahl. “The lights went on, it was disarmed.”

Dahl is glad the thief didn’t take his truck. All he did was rummage through the contents of his glove compartment.

“I was clever enough not to carry anything of value in there. That’s what he was looking for.”

But Dahl is worried about how the thief got in so lightly.

“You used to have a wire that you glided down the window, when it was mechanical. But now it’s electronic.”

Cases like this are becoming more common across the region.

Lars Carlson says the man who broke into his car in January also appeared to be carrying something in a backpack.

“It’s running through codes automatically or it’s a button they’re pushing or something is happening. But whatever it does, it seems to trick the car into thinking he’s got the legitimate keys.”

Seattle police say they don’t know exactly what kind of device thieves are using, or how it works. But they are worried.

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

Dahl says automakers need to do something to give people a little more security. But until that happens, he’s going to share this movie with as many neighbors as he can.

“I hope other people pay attention, make sure things are secure and locked, and don’t keep things in your car that are of any value.”

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

thirty two comments

Slam1263 (@IKnowBO)

It is just a random code transmitter.

They can transmit a million codes with the shove of a button.

Tow truck driver have been using them for over twenty years.

Don’t the receivers limit the number of failed attempts per 2nd?

Sadly No they don’t

Rodger Wolkins

They need to emit a cloud of pepper squirt after three failed attempts.

Fresh Stud

Then cars in parking lots would permanently be admitting pepper splash, in a parking lot hundreds of remote keys are used permanently, so it has to be able to see signals without assuming it is failed attempts. They need to increase the complexity of the codes, add more bits, make it too hard to crack.

ashford
lionfan

Can very likely take the entire damn car if it uses keyless ignition, right?

Testicules

For most cars, the thief would still have to deal with the mechanical steering lock that is released by the mechanical portion of the key.

As for some cars that now have keyless thrust button embark features… ?

clovellstc

The car permanently scans for the key. Since this is most likely just a device and sends out a bunch of signals in a row he wouldn’t know which one was for the car, so I doubt it would work on the ignition.

Phillip Coiner

I know how they are doing it. Have the cops send me an e-mail

john Bowler

See a classic Forrest Whitaker film “Ghost Dog”. The hero uses one of those code generators to steal luxury cars.

So, They may steal them from Tow Truck Drivers?

Tester

The device works by “pinging” the FOB on the key chain which, in turn, generates a signal to the vehicle. The device only works when the keys are within operational range of the vehicle.

Frank

This techbology isn’t fresh, over a decade old if anything. They demonstrated this in the movie, ‘Gone in sixty Seconds’.

Device is available on aliexpress from china for $600 or less. Clones key fobs and can transmit them. It’s not a mystery.

Thats not how they work. You need access to the original keys and the car to make a clone.

Most people keep their registration and garage door opener in their car. If a thief observes you leave your vehicle in a parking lot and can access your car this way, he can go to your home and rob it while you’re shopping or standing in the parking lot wondering where your car is.

Dan Darius

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

It’s a shame that cops are always reactive instead of proactive.

Dan Darius
Dee Ouchman

It’s a ordinary Tesla coil which energised the door lock/unlock servo.

Justa Joe

I don’t need a fresh car that badly. My two thousand five Ford Concentrate has manual (mechanical) doorlocks, manual (palm crank) windows, and a 5-speed manual transmission. Its also carrying 275,000 miles on the odometer.

I’m in no fear of anyone attempting to steal my wheels.

Marc M

Yes, we have the exact same car – two thousand five Ford Concentrate. Looks like a ruddy ordnance vehicle, but I like it because it has NOTHING (except AC). Manual trans, windows, everything. And a freakin’ metal key. I do not like this fresh crap. “The more the over-think the plumbing, the lighter it is to stop up the drain,” in the words of Scotty. And every tour to the stealership to fix the over-thought under-engineered geek fucktoys is an exercise on your wallet.

This is finish rubbish. The rolling code protocol (keyloq) used by keyless entry will only permit two hundred fifty six code attempts before the original key will need to be reset. This is a hoax.

George Johnson

Evidently the cops are NOT one step ahead of the criminals.

Starheart

There are too many COPS that ARE the CRIMINALS OUT THERE.

pithypaul

The thief is going to sue for invasion of his own privacy, as nobody asked him for permission to use his pic. Hey, this is Amerika.

SMARTERTHANYOU

Wow.. these reporters, especially the police department, are frankly imbeciles! The technology is over a decade old, it’s called a laptop and a receiver.

Starheart

Homeland Security Personnel are using very advanced electronic technology to hack into everything now.

People like Kay Griggs, Michael Hastings, Phillip Marshall, Judi Bari and myself have been targeted by some of these these special ops Homeland Security personnel involved in criminal operations in the US. They have been promoting and rewarding war criminals for years from the CIA and Military Black Sites and Torment Facilities, into Homeland Security, FBI, Law Enforcement, and other government agencies across the country, to target citizens for surveillance and crimes.

(Witness Kay Griggs movies on you tube, as she gives her testimonial for what has been going on for a long time now.)

Since 2011, I’ve been targeted for surveillance burglaries, vandalism, pet torment, vehicle tampering as well as the planting of stolen and unknown origin property and malicious prosecution. My safe deposit box in, Colville, WA ,was even burglarized. I can’t find any organization to help me, out of the dozens and dozens of civil and constitutional rights organizations and attorneys I’ve contacted. I had to get a private investigator to trace license plates and find out who some of the people involved in these targeted black operations are.

I can’t get my FOIA Requests fulfilled for information on my surveillance “Watch List” targeted crimes and it’s even common skill in Washington state that Homeland Security personnel are involved in my targeted surveillance and gang stalking crimes. There has even been one out of court settlement in one case in the Seattle area for these criminal activities by Homeland Security Personnel.

My cruise control stopped working on my one hundred forty mile journey back from Spokane WA, on Thursday February 26th (about two weeks ago), and I was gang stalked on the road by numerous vehicles (one of them with a Big Transformer Decal on the Back Window, one with a Big US “Infantry” sticker on his back window, as well as by WA license plate # WEPLAY2) and after they all turned off and I got past Colville, WA, I attempted my cruise control again and it commenced working. I know they have had remote control over my car alarms on my vehicles for a long time now, and it looks to me that they can also remote control my cruise control as well now……

They have been using FOIA DENIALS, FOIA APPEAL DENIALS, GAG ORDERS, NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS AND EVEN – “CLASSIFYING” INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COVER UP THEIR CRIMES AGAINST TARGETED INDIVIDUALS, ACTIVISTS AND JOURNALISTS.

Witness: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car, Q13 FOX News

See: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car

SEATTLE — A West Seattle man is sharing a surveillance movie that shows the scaring way thieves are using technology to break into cars.

Observe the movie as a man approaches Tom Dahl’s truck in this driveway. He attempts the treat, but the door is locked. So he takes off his backpack, moves it close to the window. Seconds later, he’s able to get inwards.

Photo Gallery

“He opens the door up,” says Dahl. “The lights went on, it was disarmed.”

Dahl is glad the thief didn’t take his truck. All he did was rummage through the contents of his glove compartment.

“I was wise enough not to carry anything of value in there. That’s what he was looking for.”

But Dahl is worried about how the thief got in so lightly.

“You used to have a wire that you slipped down the window, when it was mechanical. But now it’s electronic.”

Cases like this are becoming more common across the region.

Lars Carlson says the man who broke into his car in January also appeared to be carrying something in a backpack.

“It’s running through codes automatically or it’s a button they’re pushing or something is happening. But whatever it does, it seems to trick the car into thinking he’s got the legitimate keys.”

Seattle police say they don’t know exactly what kind of device thieves are using, or how it works. But they are worried.

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

Dahl says automakers need to do something to give people a little more security. But until that happens, he’s going to share this movie with as many neighbors as he can.

“I hope other people pay attention, make sure things are secure and locked, and don’t keep things in your car that are of any value.”

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

thirty two comments

Slam1263 (@IKnowBO)

It is just a random code transmitter.

They can transmit a million codes with the shove of a button.

Tow truck driver have been using them for over twenty years.

Don’t the receivers limit the number of failed attempts per 2nd?

Sadly No they don’t

Rodger Wolkins

They need to emit a cloud of pepper burst after three failed attempts.

Fresh Man

Then cars in parking lots would permanently be admitting pepper drizzle, in a parking lot hundreds of remote keys are used permanently, so it has to be able to see signals without assuming it is failed attempts. They need to increase the complexity of the codes, add more bits, make it too hard to crack.

ashford
lionfan

Can very likely take the entire damn car if it uses keyless ignition, right?

Testicules

For most cars, the thief would still have to deal with the mechanical steering lock that is released by the mechanical portion of the key.

As for some cars that now have keyless thrust button commence features… ?

clovellstc

The car permanently scans for the key. Since this is most likely just a device and sends out a bunch of signals in a row he wouldn’t know which one was for the car, so I doubt it would work on the ignition.

Phillip Coiner

I know how they are doing it. Have the cops send me an e-mail

john Bowler

Observe a classic Forrest Whitaker film “Ghost Dog”. The hero uses one of those code generators to steal luxury cars.

So, They may steal them from Tow Truck Drivers?

Tester

The device works by “pinging” the FOB on the key chain which, in turn, generates a signal to the vehicle. The device only works when the keys are within operational range of the vehicle.

Frank

This techbology isn’t fresh, over a decade old if anything. They demonstrated this in the movie, ‘Gone in sixty Seconds’.

Device is available on aliexpress from china for $600 or less. Clones key fobs and can transmit them. It’s not a mystery.

Thats not how they work. You need access to the original keys and the car to make a clone.

Most people keep their registration and garage door opener in their car. If a thief observes you leave your vehicle in a parking lot and can access your car this way, he can go to your home and rob it while you’re shopping or standing in the parking lot wondering where your car is.

Dan Darius

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

It’s a shame that cops are always reactive instead of proactive.

Dan Darius
Dee Ouchman

It’s a plain Tesla coil which energised the door lock/unlock servo.

Justa Joe

I don’t need a fresh car that badly. My two thousand five Ford Concentrate has manual (mechanical) doorlocks, manual (arm crank) windows, and a 5-speed manual transmission. Its also carrying 275,000 miles on the odometer.

I’m in no fear of anyone attempting to steal my wheels.

Marc M

Yes, we have the exact same car – two thousand five Ford Concentrate. Looks like a ruddy ordnance vehicle, but I like it because it has NOTHING (except AC). Manual trans, windows, everything. And a freakin’ metal key. I do not like this fresh crap. “The more the over-think the plumbing, the lighter it is to stop up the drain,” in the words of Scotty. And every tour to the stealership to fix the over-thought under-engineered geek fucktoys is an exercise on your wallet.

This is finish rubbish. The rolling code protocol (keyloq) used by keyless entry will only permit two hundred fifty six code attempts before the original key will need to be reset. This is a hoax.

George Johnson

Evidently the cops are NOT one step ahead of the criminals.

Starheart

There are too many COPS that ARE the CRIMINALS OUT THERE.

pithypaul

The thief is going to sue for invasion of his own privacy, as nobody asked him for permission to use his picture. Hey, this is Amerika.

SMARTERTHANYOU

Wow.. these reporters, especially the police department, are frankly imbeciles! The technology is over a decade old, it’s called a laptop and a receiver.

Starheart

Homeland Security Personnel are using very advanced electronic technology to hack into everything now.

People like Kay Griggs, Michael Hastings, Phillip Marshall, Judi Bari and myself have been targeted by some of these these special ops Homeland Security personnel involved in criminal operations in the US. They have been promoting and rewarding war criminals for years from the CIA and Military Black Sites and Torment Facilities, into Homeland Security, FBI, Law Enforcement, and other government agencies across the country, to target citizens for surveillance and crimes.

(Observe Kay Griggs movies on you tube, as she gives her testimonial for what has been going on for a long time now.)

Since 2011, I’ve been targeted for surveillance burglaries, vandalism, pet torment, vehicle tampering as well as the planting of stolen and unknown origin property and malicious prosecution. My safe deposit box in, Colville, WA ,was even burglarized. I can’t find any organization to help me, out of the dozens and dozens of civil and constitutional rights organizations and attorneys I’ve contacted. I had to get a private investigator to trace license plates and find out who some of the people involved in these targeted black operations are.

I can’t get my FOIA Requests fulfilled for information on my surveillance “Watch List” targeted crimes and it’s even common skill in Washington state that Homeland Security personnel are involved in my targeted surveillance and gang stalking crimes. There has even been one out of court settlement in one case in the Seattle area for these criminal activities by Homeland Security Personnel.

My cruise control stopped working on my one hundred forty mile tour back from Spokane WA, on Thursday February 26th (about two weeks ago), and I was gang stalked on the road by numerous vehicles (one of them with a Big Transformer Decal on the Back Window, one with a Big US “Infantry” sticker on his back window, as well as by WA license plate # WEPLAY2) and after they all turned off and I got past Colville, WA, I attempted my cruise control again and it commenced working. I know they have had remote control over my car alarms on my vehicles for a long time now, and it looks to me that they can also remote control my cruise control as well now……

They have been using FOIA DENIALS, FOIA APPEAL DENIALS, GAG ORDERS, NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS AND EVEN – “CLASSIFYING” INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COVER UP THEIR CRIMES AGAINST TARGETED INDIVIDUALS, ACTIVISTS AND JOURNALISTS.

See: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car, Q13 FOX News

Witness: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car

SEATTLE — A West Seattle man is sharing a surveillance movie that shows the panicking way thieves are using technology to break into cars.

See the movie as a man approaches Tom Dahl’s truck in this driveway. He attempts the treat, but the door is locked. So he takes off his backpack, moves it close to the window. Seconds later, he’s able to get inwards.

Photo Gallery

“He opens the door up,” says Dahl. “The lights went on, it was disarmed.”

Dahl is glad the thief didn’t take his truck. All he did was rummage through the contents of his glove compartment.

“I was wise enough not to carry anything of value in there. That’s what he was looking for.”

But Dahl is worried about how the thief got in so lightly.

“You used to have a wire that you glided down the window, when it was mechanical. But now it’s electronic.”

Cases like this are becoming more common across the region.

Lars Carlson says the man who broke into his car in January also appeared to be carrying something in a backpack.

“It’s running through codes automatically or it’s a button they’re pushing or something is happening. But whatever it does, it seems to trick the car into thinking he’s got the legitimate keys.”

Seattle police say they don’t know exactly what kind of device thieves are using, or how it works. But they are worried.

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

Dahl says automakers need to do something to give people a little more security. But until that happens, he’s going to share this movie with as many neighbors as he can.

“I hope other people pay attention, make sure things are secure and locked, and don’t keep things in your car that are of any value.”

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

thirty two comments

Slam1263 (@IKnowBO)

It is just a random code transmitter.

They can transmit a million codes with the thrust of a button.

Tow truck driver have been using them for over twenty years.

Don’t the receivers limit the number of failed attempts per 2nd?

Sadly No they don’t

Rodger Wolkins

They need to emit a cloud of pepper unload after three failed attempts.

Fresh Dude

Then cars in parking lots would permanently be admitting pepper splatter, in a parking lot hundreds of remote keys are used permanently, so it has to be able to see signals without assuming it is failed attempts. They need to increase the complexity of the codes, add more bits, make it too hard to crack.

ashford
lionfan

Can very likely take the entire damn car if it uses keyless ignition, right?

Testicules

For most cars, the thief would still have to deal with the mechanical steering lock that is released by the mechanical portion of the key.

As for some cars that now have keyless shove button commence features… ?

clovellstc

The car permanently scans for the key. Since this is very likely just a device and sends out a bunch of signals in a row he wouldn’t know which one was for the car, so I doubt it would work on the ignition.

Phillip Coiner

I know how they are doing it. Have the cops send me an e-mail

john Bowler

Observe a classic Forrest Whitaker film “Ghost Dog”. The hero uses one of those code generators to steal luxury cars.

So, They may steal them from Tow Truck Drivers?

Tester

The device works by “pinging” the FOB on the key chain which, in turn, generates a signal to the vehicle. The device only works when the keys are within operational range of the vehicle.

Frank

This techbology isn’t fresh, over a decade old if anything. They demonstrated this in the movie, ‘Gone in sixty Seconds’.

Device is available on aliexpress from china for $600 or less. Clones key fobs and can transmit them. It’s not a mystery.

Thats not how they work. You need access to the original keys and the car to make a clone.

Most people keep their registration and garage door opener in their car. If a thief witnesses you leave your vehicle in a parking lot and can access your car this way, he can go to your home and rob it while you’re shopping or standing in the parking lot wondering where your car is.

Dan Darius

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

It’s a shame that cops are always reactive instead of proactive.

Dan Darius
Dee Ouchman

It’s a plain Tesla coil which energised the door lock/unlock servo.

Justa Joe

I don’t need a fresh car that badly. My two thousand five Ford Concentrate has manual (mechanical) doorlocks, manual (arm crank) windows, and a 5-speed manual transmission. Its also carrying 275,000 miles on the odometer.

I’m in no fear of anyone attempting to steal my wheels.

Marc M

Yes, we have the exact same car – two thousand five Ford Concentrate. Looks like a ruddy ordnance vehicle, but I like it because it has NOTHING (except AC). Manual trans, windows, everything. And a freakin’ metal key. I do not like this fresh crap. “The more the over-think the plumbing, the lighter it is to stop up the drain,” in the words of Scotty. And every journey to the stealership to fix the over-thought under-engineered geek fucktoys is an exercise on your wallet.

This is accomplish rubbish. The rolling code protocol (keyloq) used by keyless entry will only permit two hundred fifty six code attempts before the original key will need to be reset. This is a hoax.

George Johnson

Evidently the cops are NOT one step ahead of the criminals.

Starheart

There are too many COPS that ARE the CRIMINALS OUT THERE.

pithypaul

The thief is going to sue for invasion of his own privacy, as nobody asked him for permission to use his photo. Hey, this is Amerika.

SMARTERTHANYOU

Wow.. these reporters, especially the police department, are frankly imbeciles! The technology is over a decade old, it’s called a laptop and a receiver.

Starheart

Homeland Security Personnel are using very advanced electronic technology to hack into everything now.

People like Kay Griggs, Michael Hastings, Phillip Marshall, Judi Bari and myself have been targeted by some of these these special ops Homeland Security personnel involved in criminal operations in the US. They have been promoting and rewarding war criminals for years from the CIA and Military Black Sites and Torment Facilities, into Homeland Security, FBI, Law Enforcement, and other government agencies across the country, to target citizens for surveillance and crimes.

(See Kay Griggs movies on you tube, as she gives her testimonial for what has been going on for a long time now.)

Since 2011, I’ve been targeted for surveillance burglaries, vandalism, pet torment, vehicle tampering as well as the planting of stolen and unknown origin property and malicious prosecution. My safe deposit box in, Colville, WA ,was even burglarized. I can’t find any organization to help me, out of the dozens and dozens of civil and constitutional rights organizations and attorneys I’ve contacted. I had to get a private investigator to trace license plates and find out who some of the people involved in these targeted black operations are.

I can’t get my FOIA Requests fulfilled for information on my surveillance “Watch List” targeted crimes and it’s even common skill in Washington state that Homeland Security personnel are involved in my targeted surveillance and gang stalking crimes. There has even been one out of court settlement in one case in the Seattle area for these criminal activities by Homeland Security Personnel.

My cruise control stopped working on my one hundred forty mile tour back from Spokane WA, on Thursday February 26th (about two weeks ago), and I was gang stalked on the road by numerous vehicles (one of them with a Big Transformer Decal on the Back Window, one with a Big US “Infantry” sticker on his back window, as well as by WA license plate # WEPLAY2) and after they all turned off and I got past Colville, WA, I attempted my cruise control again and it commenced working. I know they have had remote control over my car alarms on my vehicles for a long time now, and it looks to me that they can also remote control my cruise control as well now……

They have been using FOIA DENIALS, FOIA APPEAL DENIALS, GAG ORDERS, NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS AND EVEN – “CLASSIFYING” INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COVER UP THEIR CRIMES AGAINST TARGETED INDIVIDUALS, ACTIVISTS AND JOURNALISTS.

See: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car, Q13 FOX News

Witness: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car

SEATTLE — A West Seattle man is sharing a surveillance movie that shows the panicking way thieves are using technology to break into cars.

See the movie as a man approaches Tom Dahl’s truck in this driveway. He attempts the treat, but the door is locked. So he takes off his backpack, moves it close to the window. Seconds later, he’s able to get inwards.

Photo Gallery

“He opens the door up,” says Dahl. “The lights went on, it was disarmed.”

Dahl is glad the thief didn’t take his truck. All he did was rummage through the contents of his glove compartment.

“I was clever enough not to carry anything of value in there. That’s what he was looking for.”

But Dahl is worried about how the thief got in so lightly.

“You used to have a wire that you slipped down the window, when it was mechanical. But now it’s electronic.”

Cases like this are becoming more common across the region.

Lars Carlson says the man who broke into his car in January also appeared to be carrying something in a backpack.

“It’s running through codes automatically or it’s a button they’re pushing or something is happening. But whatever it does, it seems to trick the car into thinking he’s got the legitimate keys.”

Seattle police say they don’t know exactly what kind of device thieves are using, or how it works. But they are worried.

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

Dahl says automakers need to do something to give people a little more security. But until that happens, he’s going to share this movie with as many neighbors as he can.

“I hope other people pay attention, make sure things are secure and locked, and don’t keep things in your car that are of any value.”

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

thirty two comments

Slam1263 (@IKnowBO)

It is just a random code transmitter.

They can transmit a million codes with the thrust of a button.

Tow truck driver have been using them for over twenty years.

Don’t the receivers limit the number of failed attempts per 2nd?

Sadly No they don’t

Rodger Wolkins

They need to emit a cloud of pepper burst after three failed attempts.

Fresh Boy

Then cars in parking lots would permanently be admitting pepper unload, in a parking lot hundreds of remote keys are used permanently, so it has to be able to see signals without assuming it is failed attempts. They need to increase the complexity of the codes, add more bits, make it too hard to crack.

ashford
lionfan

Can very likely take the entire damn car if it uses keyless ignition, right?

Testicules

For most cars, the thief would still have to deal with the mechanical steering lock that is released by the mechanical portion of the key.

As for some cars that now have keyless shove button commence features… ?

clovellstc

The car permanently scans for the key. Since this is very likely just a device and sends out a bunch of signals in a row he wouldn’t know which one was for the car, so I doubt it would work on the ignition.

Phillip Coiner

I know how they are doing it. Have the cops send me an e-mail

john Bowler

Observe a classic Forrest Whitaker film “Ghost Dog”. The hero uses one of those code generators to steal luxury cars.

So, They may steal them from Tow Truck Drivers?

Tester

The device works by “pinging” the FOB on the key chain which, in turn, generates a signal to the vehicle. The device only works when the keys are within operational range of the vehicle.

Frank

This techbology isn’t fresh, over a decade old if anything. They demonstrated this in the movie, ‘Gone in sixty Seconds’.

Device is available on aliexpress from china for $600 or less. Clones key fobs and can transmit them. It’s not a mystery.

Thats not how they work. You need access to the original keys and the car to make a clone.

Most people keep their registration and garage door opener in their car. If a thief observes you leave your vehicle in a parking lot and can access your car this way, he can go to your home and rob it while you’re shopping or standing in the parking lot wondering where your car is.

Dan Darius

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

It’s a shame that cops are always reactive instead of proactive.

Dan Darius
Dee Ouchman

It’s a elementary Tesla coil which energised the door lock/unlock servo.

Justa Joe

I don’t need a fresh car that badly. My two thousand five Ford Concentrate has manual (mechanical) doorlocks, manual (arm crank) windows, and a 5-speed manual transmission. Its also carrying 275,000 miles on the odometer.

I’m in no fear of anyone attempting to steal my wheels.

Marc M

Yes, we have the exact same car – two thousand five Ford Concentrate. Looks like a ruddy ordnance vehicle, but I like it because it has NOTHING (except AC). Manual trans, windows, everything. And a freakin’ metal key. I do not like this fresh crap. “The more the over-think the plumbing, the lighter it is to stop up the drain,” in the words of Scotty. And every journey to the stealership to fix the over-thought under-engineered geek fucktoys is an exercise on your wallet.

This is accomplish rubbish. The rolling code protocol (keyloq) used by keyless entry will only permit two hundred fifty six code attempts before the original key will need to be reset. This is a hoax.

George Johnson

Evidently the cops are NOT one step ahead of the criminals.

Starheart

There are too many COPS that ARE the CRIMINALS OUT THERE.

pithypaul

The thief is going to sue for invasion of his own privacy, as nobody asked him for permission to use his pic. Hey, this is Amerika.

SMARTERTHANYOU

Wow.. these reporters, especially the police department, are frankly imbeciles! The technology is over a decade old, it’s called a laptop and a receiver.

Starheart

Homeland Security Personnel are using very advanced electronic technology to hack into everything now.

People like Kay Griggs, Michael Hastings, Phillip Marshall, Judi Bari and myself have been targeted by some of these these special ops Homeland Security personnel involved in criminal operations in the US. They have been promoting and rewarding war criminals for years from the CIA and Military Black Sites and Torment Facilities, into Homeland Security, FBI, Law Enforcement, and other government agencies across the country, to target citizens for surveillance and crimes.

(Observe Kay Griggs movies on you tube, as she gives her testimonial for what has been going on for a long time now.)

Since 2011, I’ve been targeted for surveillance burglaries, vandalism, pet torment, vehicle tampering as well as the planting of stolen and unknown origin property and malicious prosecution. My safe deposit box in, Colville, WA ,was even burglarized. I can’t find any organization to help me, out of the dozens and dozens of civil and constitutional rights organizations and attorneys I’ve contacted. I had to get a private investigator to trace license plates and find out who some of the people involved in these targeted black operations are.

I can’t get my FOIA Requests fulfilled for information on my surveillance “Watch List” targeted crimes and it’s even common skill in Washington state that Homeland Security personnel are involved in my targeted surveillance and gang stalking crimes. There has even been one out of court settlement in one case in the Seattle area for these criminal activities by Homeland Security Personnel.

My cruise control stopped working on my one hundred forty mile tour back from Spokane WA, on Thursday February 26th (about two weeks ago), and I was gang stalked on the road by numerous vehicles (one of them with a Big Transformer Decal on the Back Window, one with a Big US “Infantry” sticker on his back window, as well as by WA license plate # WEPLAY2) and after they all turned off and I got past Colville, WA, I attempted my cruise control again and it commenced working. I know they have had remote control over my car alarms on my vehicles for a long time now, and it looks to me that they can also remote control my cruise control as well now……

They have been using FOIA DENIALS, FOIA APPEAL DENIALS, GAG ORDERS, NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS AND EVEN – “CLASSIFYING” INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COVER UP THEIR CRIMES AGAINST TARGETED INDIVIDUALS, ACTIVISTS AND JOURNALISTS.

Witness: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car, Q13 FOX News

Observe: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car

SEATTLE — A West Seattle man is sharing a surveillance movie that shows the panicking way thieves are using technology to break into cars.

Witness the movie as a man approaches Tom Dahl’s truck in this driveway. He attempts the treat, but the door is locked. So he takes off his backpack, moves it close to the window. Seconds later, he’s able to get inwards.

Photo Gallery

“He opens the door up,” says Dahl. “The lights went on, it was disarmed.”

Dahl is glad the thief didn’t take his truck. All he did was rummage through the contents of his glove compartment.

“I was brainy enough not to carry anything of value in there. That’s what he was looking for.”

But Dahl is worried about how the thief got in so lightly.

“You used to have a wire that you slipped down the window, when it was mechanical. But now it’s electronic.”

Cases like this are becoming more common across the region.

Lars Carlson says the man who broke into his car in January also appeared to be carrying something in a backpack.

“It’s running through codes automatically or it’s a button they’re pushing or something is happening. But whatever it does, it seems to trick the car into thinking he’s got the legitimate keys.”

Seattle police say they don’t know exactly what kind of device thieves are using, or how it works. But they are worried.

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

Dahl says automakers need to do something to give people a little more security. But until that happens, he’s going to share this movie with as many neighbors as he can.

“I hope other people pay attention, make sure things are secure and locked, and don’t keep things in your car that are of any value.”

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

thirty two comments

Slam1263 (@IKnowBO)

It is just a random code transmitter.

They can transmit a million codes with the shove of a button.

Tow truck driver have been using them for over twenty years.

Don’t the receivers limit the number of failed attempts per 2nd?

Sadly No they don’t

Rodger Wolkins

They need to emit a cloud of pepper splatter after three failed attempts.

Fresh Man

Then cars in parking lots would permanently be admitting pepper splash, in a parking lot hundreds of remote keys are used permanently, so it has to be able to see signals without assuming it is failed attempts. They need to increase the complexity of the codes, add more bits, make it too hard to crack.

ashford
lionfan

Can most likely take the entire damn car if it uses keyless ignition, right?

Testicules

For most cars, the thief would still have to deal with the mechanical steering lock that is released by the mechanical portion of the key.

As for some cars that now have keyless shove button commence features… ?

clovellstc

The car permanently scans for the key. Since this is most likely just a device and sends out a bunch of signals in a row he wouldn’t know which one was for the car, so I doubt it would work on the ignition.

Phillip Coiner

I know how they are doing it. Have the cops send me an e-mail

john Bowler

Witness a classic Forrest Whitaker film “Ghost Dog”. The hero uses one of those code generators to steal luxury cars.

So, They may steal them from Tow Truck Drivers?

Tester

The device works by “pinging” the FOB on the key chain which, in turn, generates a signal to the vehicle. The device only works when the keys are within operational range of the vehicle.

Frank

This techbology isn’t fresh, over a decade old if anything. They demonstrated this in the movie, ‘Gone in sixty Seconds’.

Device is available on aliexpress from china for $600 or less. Clones key fobs and can transmit them. It’s not a mystery.

Thats not how they work. You need access to the original keys and the car to make a clone.

Most people keep their registration and garage door opener in their car. If a thief sees you leave your vehicle in a parking lot and can access your car this way, he can go to your home and rob it while you’re shopping or standing in the parking lot wondering where your car is.

Dan Darius

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

It’s a shame that cops are always reactive instead of proactive.

Dan Darius
Dee Ouchman

It’s a elementary Tesla coil which energised the door lock/unlock servo.

Justa Joe

I don’t need a fresh car that badly. My two thousand five Ford Concentrate has manual (mechanical) doorlocks, manual (palm crank) windows, and a 5-speed manual transmission. Its also carrying 275,000 miles on the odometer.

I’m in no fear of anyone attempting to steal my wheels.

Marc M

Yes, we have the exact same car – two thousand five Ford Concentrate. Looks like a ruddy ordnance vehicle, but I like it because it has NOTHING (except AC). Manual trans, windows, everything. And a freakin’ metal key. I do not like this fresh crap. “The more the over-think the plumbing, the lighter it is to stop up the drain,” in the words of Scotty. And every excursion to the stealership to fix the over-thought under-engineered geek fucktoys is an exercise on your wallet.

This is finish rubbish. The rolling code protocol (keyloq) used by keyless entry will only permit two hundred fifty six code attempts before the original key will need to be reset. This is a hoax.

George Johnson

Evidently the cops are NOT one step ahead of the criminals.

Starheart

There are too many COPS that ARE the CRIMINALS OUT THERE.

pithypaul

The thief is going to sue for invasion of his own privacy, as nobody asked him for permission to use his photo. Hey, this is Amerika.

SMARTERTHANYOU

Wow.. these reporters, especially the police department, are frankly imbeciles! The technology is over a decade old, it’s called a laptop and a receiver.

Starheart

Homeland Security Personnel are using very advanced electronic technology to hack into everything now.

People like Kay Griggs, Michael Hastings, Phillip Marshall, Judi Bari and myself have been targeted by some of these these special ops Homeland Security personnel involved in criminal operations in the US. They have been promoting and rewarding war criminals for years from the CIA and Military Black Sites and Torment Facilities, into Homeland Security, FBI, Law Enforcement, and other government agencies across the country, to target citizens for surveillance and crimes.

(See Kay Griggs movies on you tube, as she gives her testimonial for what has been going on for a long time now.)

Since 2011, I’ve been targeted for surveillance burglaries, vandalism, pet torment, vehicle tampering as well as the planting of stolen and unknown origin property and malicious prosecution. My safe deposit box in, Colville, WA ,was even burglarized. I can’t find any organization to help me, out of the dozens and dozens of civil and constitutional rights organizations and attorneys I’ve contacted. I had to get a private investigator to trace license plates and find out who some of the people involved in these targeted black operations are.

I can’t get my FOIA Requests fulfilled for information on my surveillance “Watch List” targeted crimes and it’s even common skill in Washington state that Homeland Security personnel are involved in my targeted surveillance and gang stalking crimes. There has even been one out of court settlement in one case in the Seattle area for these criminal activities by Homeland Security Personnel.

My cruise control stopped working on my one hundred forty mile excursion back from Spokane WA, on Thursday February 26th (about two weeks ago), and I was gang stalked on the road by numerous vehicles (one of them with a Big Transformer Decal on the Back Window, one with a Big US “Infantry” sticker on his back window, as well as by WA license plate # WEPLAY2) and after they all turned off and I got past Colville, WA, I attempted my cruise control again and it commenced working. I know they have had remote control over my car alarms on my vehicles for a long time now, and it looks to me that they can also remote control my cruise control as well now……

They have been using FOIA DENIALS, FOIA APPEAL DENIALS, GAG ORDERS, NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS AND EVEN – “CLASSIFYING” INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COVER UP THEIR CRIMES AGAINST TARGETED INDIVIDUALS, ACTIVISTS AND JOURNALISTS.

See: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car, Q13 FOX News

Observe: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car

SEATTLE — A West Seattle man is sharing a surveillance movie that shows the scaring way thieves are using technology to break into cars.

See the movie as a man approaches Tom Dahl’s truck in this driveway. He attempts the treat, but the door is locked. So he takes off his backpack, moves it close to the window. Seconds later, he’s able to get inwards.

Photo Gallery

“He opens the door up,” says Dahl. “The lights went on, it was disarmed.”

Dahl is glad the thief didn’t take his truck. All he did was rummage through the contents of his glove compartment.

“I was wise enough not to carry anything of value in there. That’s what he was looking for.”

But Dahl is worried about how the thief got in so lightly.

“You used to have a wire that you slipped down the window, when it was mechanical. But now it’s electronic.”

Cases like this are becoming more common across the region.

Lars Carlson says the man who broke into his car in January also appeared to be carrying something in a backpack.

“It’s running through codes automatically or it’s a button they’re pushing or something is happening. But whatever it does, it seems to trick the car into thinking he’s got the legitimate keys.”

Seattle police say they don’t know exactly what kind of device thieves are using, or how it works. But they are worried.

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

Dahl says automakers need to do something to give people a little more security. But until that happens, he’s going to share this movie with as many neighbors as he can.

“I hope other people pay attention, make sure things are secure and locked, and don’t keep things in your car that are of any value.”

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

thirty two comments

Slam1263 (@IKnowBO)

It is just a random code transmitter.

They can transmit a million codes with the shove of a button.

Tow truck driver have been using them for over twenty years.

Don’t the receivers limit the number of failed attempts per 2nd?

Sadly No they don’t

Rodger Wolkins

They need to emit a cloud of pepper drizzle after three failed attempts.

Fresh Dude

Then cars in parking lots would permanently be admitting pepper burst, in a parking lot hundreds of remote keys are used permanently, so it has to be able to see signals without assuming it is failed attempts. They need to increase the complexity of the codes, add more bits, make it too hard to crack.

ashford
lionfan

Can very likely take the entire damn car if it uses keyless ignition, right?

Testicules

For most cars, the thief would still have to deal with the mechanical steering lock that is released by the mechanical portion of the key.

As for some cars that now have keyless shove button begin features… ?

clovellstc

The car permanently scans for the key. Since this is very likely just a device and sends out a bunch of signals in a row he wouldn’t know which one was for the car, so I doubt it would work on the ignition.

Phillip Coiner

I know how they are doing it. Have the cops send me an e-mail

john Bowler

Witness a classic Forrest Whitaker film “Ghost Dog”. The hero uses one of those code generators to steal luxury cars.

So, They may steal them from Tow Truck Drivers?

Tester

The device works by “pinging” the FOB on the key chain which, in turn, generates a signal to the vehicle. The device only works when the keys are within operational range of the vehicle.

Frank

This techbology isn’t fresh, over a decade old if anything. They demonstrated this in the movie, ‘Gone in sixty Seconds’.

Device is available on aliexpress from china for $600 or less. Clones key fobs and can transmit them. It’s not a mystery.

Thats not how they work. You need access to the original keys and the car to make a clone.

Most people keep their registration and garage door opener in their car. If a thief witnesses you leave your vehicle in a parking lot and can access your car this way, he can go to your home and rob it while you’re shopping or standing in the parking lot wondering where your car is.

Dan Darius

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

It’s a shame that cops are always reactive instead of proactive.

Dan Darius
Dee Ouchman

It’s a plain Tesla coil which energised the door lock/unlock servo.

Justa Joe

I don’t need a fresh car that badly. My two thousand five Ford Concentrate has manual (mechanical) doorlocks, manual (forearm crank) windows, and a 5-speed manual transmission. Its also carrying 275,000 miles on the odometer.

I’m in no fear of anyone attempting to steal my wheels.

Marc M

Yes, we have the exact same car – two thousand five Ford Concentrate. Looks like a ruddy ordnance vehicle, but I like it because it has NOTHING (except AC). Manual trans, windows, everything. And a freakin’ metal key. I do not like this fresh crap. “The more the over-think the plumbing, the lighter it is to stop up the drain,” in the words of Scotty. And every journey to the stealership to fix the over-thought under-engineered geek fucktoys is an exercise on your wallet.

This is finish rubbish. The rolling code protocol (keyloq) used by keyless entry will only permit two hundred fifty six code attempts before the original key will need to be reset. This is a hoax.

George Johnson

Evidently the cops are NOT one step ahead of the criminals.

Starheart

There are too many COPS that ARE the CRIMINALS OUT THERE.

pithypaul

The thief is going to sue for invasion of his own privacy, as nobody asked him for permission to use his photo. Hey, this is Amerika.

SMARTERTHANYOU

Wow.. these reporters, especially the police department, are frankly imbeciles! The technology is over a decade old, it’s called a laptop and a receiver.

Starheart

Homeland Security Personnel are using very advanced electronic technology to hack into everything now.

People like Kay Griggs, Michael Hastings, Phillip Marshall, Judi Bari and myself have been targeted by some of these these special ops Homeland Security personnel involved in criminal operations in the US. They have been promoting and rewarding war criminals for years from the CIA and Military Black Sites and Torment Facilities, into Homeland Security, FBI, Law Enforcement, and other government agencies across the country, to target citizens for surveillance and crimes.

(See Kay Griggs movies on you tube, as she gives her testimonial for what has been going on for a long time now.)

Since 2011, I’ve been targeted for surveillance burglaries, vandalism, pet torment, vehicle tampering as well as the planting of stolen and unknown origin property and malicious prosecution. My safe deposit box in, Colville, WA ,was even burglarized. I can’t find any organization to help me, out of the dozens and dozens of civil and constitutional rights organizations and attorneys I’ve contacted. I had to get a private investigator to trace license plates and find out who some of the people involved in these targeted black operations are.

I can’t get my FOIA Requests fulfilled for information on my surveillance “Watch List” targeted crimes and it’s even common skill in Washington state that Homeland Security personnel are involved in my targeted surveillance and gang stalking crimes. There has even been one out of court settlement in one case in the Seattle area for these criminal activities by Homeland Security Personnel.

My cruise control stopped working on my one hundred forty mile excursion back from Spokane WA, on Thursday February 26th (about two weeks ago), and I was gang stalked on the road by numerous vehicles (one of them with a Big Transformer Decal on the Back Window, one with a Big US “Infantry” sticker on his back window, as well as by WA license plate # WEPLAY2) and after they all turned off and I got past Colville, WA, I attempted my cruise control again and it embarked working. I know they have had remote control over my car alarms on my vehicles for a long time now, and it looks to me that they can also remote control my cruise control as well now……

They have been using FOIA DENIALS, FOIA APPEAL DENIALS, GAG ORDERS, NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS AND EVEN – “CLASSIFYING” INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COVER UP THEIR CRIMES AGAINST TARGETED INDIVIDUALS, ACTIVISTS AND JOURNALISTS.

Witness: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car, Q13 FOX News

See: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car

SEATTLE — A West Seattle man is sharing a surveillance movie that shows the scaring way thieves are using technology to break into cars.

See the movie as a man approaches Tom Dahl’s truck in this driveway. He attempts the treat, but the door is locked. So he takes off his backpack, moves it close to the window. Seconds later, he’s able to get inwards.

Photo Gallery

“He opens the door up,” says Dahl. “The lights went on, it was disarmed.”

Dahl is glad the thief didn’t take his truck. All he did was rummage through the contents of his glove compartment.

“I was brainy enough not to carry anything of value in there. That’s what he was looking for.”

But Dahl is worried about how the thief got in so lightly.

“You used to have a wire that you slipped down the window, when it was mechanical. But now it’s electronic.”

Cases like this are becoming more common across the region.

Lars Carlson says the man who broke into his car in January also appeared to be carrying something in a backpack.

“It’s running through codes automatically or it’s a button they’re pushing or something is happening. But whatever it does, it seems to trick the car into thinking he’s got the legitimate keys.”

Seattle police say they don’t know exactly what kind of device thieves are using, or how it works. But they are worried.

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

Dahl says automakers need to do something to give people a little more security. But until that happens, he’s going to share this movie with as many neighbors as he can.

“I hope other people pay attention, make sure things are secure and locked, and don’t keep things in your car that are of any value.”

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

thirty two comments

Slam1263 (@IKnowBO)

It is just a random code transmitter.

They can transmit a million codes with the thrust of a button.

Tow truck driver have been using them for over twenty years.

Don’t the receivers limit the number of failed attempts per 2nd?

Sadly No they don’t

Rodger Wolkins

They need to emit a cloud of pepper bust after three failed attempts.

Fresh Dude

Then cars in parking lots would permanently be admitting pepper sploog, in a parking lot hundreds of remote keys are used permanently, so it has to be able to see signals without assuming it is failed attempts. They need to increase the complexity of the codes, add more bits, make it too hard to crack.

ashford
lionfan

Can most likely take the entire damn car if it uses keyless ignition, right?

Testicules

For most cars, the thief would still have to deal with the mechanical steering lock that is released by the mechanical portion of the key.

As for some cars that now have keyless thrust button commence features… ?

clovellstc

The car permanently scans for the key. Since this is most likely just a device and sends out a bunch of signals in a row he wouldn’t know which one was for the car, so I doubt it would work on the ignition.

Phillip Coiner

I know how they are doing it. Have the cops send me an e-mail

john Bowler

Witness a classic Forrest Whitaker film “Ghost Dog”. The hero uses one of those code generators to steal luxury cars.

So, They may steal them from Tow Truck Drivers?

Tester

The device works by “pinging” the FOB on the key chain which, in turn, generates a signal to the vehicle. The device only works when the keys are within operational range of the vehicle.

Frank

This techbology isn’t fresh, over a decade old if anything. They demonstrated this in the movie, ‘Gone in sixty Seconds’.

Device is available on aliexpress from china for $600 or less. Clones key fobs and can transmit them. It’s not a mystery.

Thats not how they work. You need access to the original keys and the car to make a clone.

Most people keep their registration and garage door opener in their car. If a thief witnesses you leave your vehicle in a parking lot and can access your car this way, he can go to your home and rob it while you’re shopping or standing in the parking lot wondering where your car is.

Dan Darius

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

It’s a shame that cops are always reactive instead of proactive.

Dan Darius
Dee Ouchman

It’s a plain Tesla coil which energised the door lock/unlock servo.

Justa Joe

I don’t need a fresh car that badly. My two thousand five Ford Concentrate has manual (mechanical) doorlocks, manual (mitt crank) windows, and a 5-speed manual transmission. Its also carrying 275,000 miles on the odometer.

I’m in no fear of anyone attempting to steal my wheels.

Marc M

Yes, we have the exact same car – two thousand five Ford Concentrate. Looks like a ruddy ordnance vehicle, but I like it because it has NOTHING (except AC). Manual trans, windows, everything. And a freakin’ metal key. I do not like this fresh crap. “The more the over-think the plumbing, the lighter it is to stop up the drain,” in the words of Scotty. And every excursion to the stealership to fix the over-thought under-engineered geek fucktoys is an exercise on your wallet.

This is finish rubbish. The rolling code protocol (keyloq) used by keyless entry will only permit two hundred fifty six code attempts before the original key will need to be reset. This is a hoax.

George Johnson

Evidently the cops are NOT one step ahead of the criminals.

Starheart

There are too many COPS that ARE the CRIMINALS OUT THERE.

pithypaul

The thief is going to sue for invasion of his own privacy, as nobody asked him for permission to use his pic. Hey, this is Amerika.

SMARTERTHANYOU

Wow.. these reporters, especially the police department, are frankly imbeciles! The technology is over a decade old, it’s called a laptop and a receiver.

Starheart

Homeland Security Personnel are using very advanced electronic technology to hack into everything now.

People like Kay Griggs, Michael Hastings, Phillip Marshall, Judi Bari and myself have been targeted by some of these these special ops Homeland Security personnel involved in criminal operations in the US. They have been promoting and rewarding war criminals for years from the CIA and Military Black Sites and Torment Facilities, into Homeland Security, FBI, Law Enforcement, and other government agencies across the country, to target citizens for surveillance and crimes.

(Witness Kay Griggs movies on you tube, as she gives her testimonial for what has been going on for a long time now.)

Since 2011, I’ve been targeted for surveillance burglaries, vandalism, pet torment, vehicle tampering as well as the planting of stolen and unknown origin property and malicious prosecution. My safe deposit box in, Colville, WA ,was even burglarized. I can’t find any organization to help me, out of the dozens and dozens of civil and constitutional rights organizations and attorneys I’ve contacted. I had to get a private investigator to trace license plates and find out who some of the people involved in these targeted black operations are.

I can’t get my FOIA Requests fulfilled for information on my surveillance “Watch List” targeted crimes and it’s even common skill in Washington state that Homeland Security personnel are involved in my targeted surveillance and gang stalking crimes. There has even been one out of court settlement in one case in the Seattle area for these criminal activities by Homeland Security Personnel.

My cruise control stopped working on my one hundred forty mile excursion back from Spokane WA, on Thursday February 26th (about two weeks ago), and I was gang stalked on the road by numerous vehicles (one of them with a Big Transformer Decal on the Back Window, one with a Big US “Infantry” sticker on his back window, as well as by WA license plate # WEPLAY2) and after they all turned off and I got past Colville, WA, I attempted my cruise control again and it commenced working. I know they have had remote control over my car alarms on my vehicles for a long time now, and it looks to me that they can also remote control my cruise control as well now……

They have been using FOIA DENIALS, FOIA APPEAL DENIALS, GAG ORDERS, NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS AND EVEN – “CLASSIFYING” INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COVER UP THEIR CRIMES AGAINST TARGETED INDIVIDUALS, ACTIVISTS AND JOURNALISTS.

Observe: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car, Q13 FOX News

See: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car

SEATTLE — A West Seattle man is sharing a surveillance movie that shows the scaring way thieves are using technology to break into cars.

See the movie as a man approaches Tom Dahl’s truck in this driveway. He attempts the treat, but the door is locked. So he takes off his backpack, moves it close to the window. Seconds later, he’s able to get inwards.

Photo Gallery

“He opens the door up,” says Dahl. “The lights went on, it was disarmed.”

Dahl is glad the thief didn’t take his truck. All he did was rummage through the contents of his glove compartment.

“I was clever enough not to carry anything of value in there. That’s what he was looking for.”

But Dahl is worried about how the thief got in so lightly.

“You used to have a wire that you slipped down the window, when it was mechanical. But now it’s electronic.”

Cases like this are becoming more common across the region.

Lars Carlson says the man who broke into his car in January also appeared to be carrying something in a backpack.

“It’s running through codes automatically or it’s a button they’re pushing or something is happening. But whatever it does, it seems to trick the car into thinking he’s got the legitimate keys.”

Seattle police say they don’t know exactly what kind of device thieves are using, or how it works. But they are worried.

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

Dahl says automakers need to do something to give people a little more security. But until that happens, he’s going to share this movie with as many neighbors as he can.

“I hope other people pay attention, make sure things are secure and locked, and don’t keep things in your car that are of any value.”

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

thirty two comments

Slam1263 (@IKnowBO)

It is just a random code transmitter.

They can transmit a million codes with the shove of a button.

Tow truck driver have been using them for over twenty years.

Don’t the receivers limit the number of failed attempts per 2nd?

Sadly No they don’t

Rodger Wolkins

They need to emit a cloud of pepper bust after three failed attempts.

Fresh Man

Then cars in parking lots would permanently be admitting pepper splash, in a parking lot hundreds of remote keys are used permanently, so it has to be able to see signals without assuming it is failed attempts. They need to increase the complexity of the codes, add more bits, make it too hard to crack.

ashford
lionfan

Can most likely take the entire damn car if it uses keyless ignition, right?

Testicules

For most cars, the thief would still have to deal with the mechanical steering lock that is released by the mechanical portion of the key.

As for some cars that now have keyless shove button begin features… ?

clovellstc

The car permanently scans for the key. Since this is very likely just a device and sends out a bunch of signals in a row he wouldn’t know which one was for the car, so I doubt it would work on the ignition.

Phillip Coiner

I know how they are doing it. Have the cops send me an e-mail

john Bowler

Observe a classic Forrest Whitaker film “Ghost Dog”. The hero uses one of those code generators to steal luxury cars.

So, They may steal them from Tow Truck Drivers?

Tester

The device works by “pinging” the FOB on the key chain which, in turn, generates a signal to the vehicle. The device only works when the keys are within operational range of the vehicle.

Frank

This techbology isn’t fresh, over a decade old if anything. They demonstrated this in the movie, ‘Gone in sixty Seconds’.

Device is available on aliexpress from china for $600 or less. Clones key fobs and can transmit them. It’s not a mystery.

Thats not how they work. You need access to the original keys and the car to make a clone.

Most people keep their registration and garage door opener in their car. If a thief observes you leave your vehicle in a parking lot and can access your car this way, he can go to your home and rob it while you’re shopping or standing in the parking lot wondering where your car is.

Dan Darius

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

It’s a shame that cops are always reactive instead of proactive.

Dan Darius
Dee Ouchman

It’s a plain Tesla coil which energised the door lock/unlock servo.

Justa Joe

I don’t need a fresh car that badly. My two thousand five Ford Concentrate has manual (mechanical) doorlocks, manual (forearm crank) windows, and a 5-speed manual transmission. Its also carrying 275,000 miles on the odometer.

I’m in no fear of anyone attempting to steal my wheels.

Marc M

Yes, we have the exact same car – two thousand five Ford Concentrate. Looks like a ruddy ordnance vehicle, but I like it because it has NOTHING (except AC). Manual trans, windows, everything. And a freakin’ metal key. I do not like this fresh crap. “The more the over-think the plumbing, the lighter it is to stop up the drain,” in the words of Scotty. And every tour to the stealership to fix the over-thought under-engineered geek fucktoys is an exercise on your wallet.

This is accomplish rubbish. The rolling code protocol (keyloq) used by keyless entry will only permit two hundred fifty six code attempts before the original key will need to be reset. This is a hoax.

George Johnson

Evidently the cops are NOT one step ahead of the criminals.

Starheart

There are too many COPS that ARE the CRIMINALS OUT THERE.

pithypaul

The thief is going to sue for invasion of his own privacy, as nobody asked him for permission to use his picture. Hey, this is Amerika.

SMARTERTHANYOU

Wow.. these reporters, especially the police department, are frankly imbeciles! The technology is over a decade old, it’s called a laptop and a receiver.

Starheart

Homeland Security Personnel are using very advanced electronic technology to hack into everything now.

People like Kay Griggs, Michael Hastings, Phillip Marshall, Judi Bari and myself have been targeted by some of these these special ops Homeland Security personnel involved in criminal operations in the US. They have been promoting and rewarding war criminals for years from the CIA and Military Black Sites and Torment Facilities, into Homeland Security, FBI, Law Enforcement, and other government agencies across the country, to target citizens for surveillance and crimes.

(Observe Kay Griggs movies on you tube, as she gives her testimonial for what has been going on for a long time now.)

Since 2011, I’ve been targeted for surveillance burglaries, vandalism, pet torment, vehicle tampering as well as the planting of stolen and unknown origin property and malicious prosecution. My safe deposit box in, Colville, WA ,was even burglarized. I can’t find any organization to help me, out of the dozens and dozens of civil and constitutional rights organizations and attorneys I’ve contacted. I had to get a private investigator to trace license plates and find out who some of the people involved in these targeted black operations are.

I can’t get my FOIA Requests fulfilled for information on my surveillance “Watch List” targeted crimes and it’s even common skill in Washington state that Homeland Security personnel are involved in my targeted surveillance and gang stalking crimes. There has even been one out of court settlement in one case in the Seattle area for these criminal activities by Homeland Security Personnel.

My cruise control stopped working on my one hundred forty mile excursion back from Spokane WA, on Thursday February 26th (about two weeks ago), and I was gang stalked on the road by numerous vehicles (one of them with a Big Transformer Decal on the Back Window, one with a Big US “Infantry” sticker on his back window, as well as by WA license plate # WEPLAY2) and after they all turned off and I got past Colville, WA, I attempted my cruise control again and it embarked working. I know they have had remote control over my car alarms on my vehicles for a long time now, and it looks to me that they can also remote control my cruise control as well now……

They have been using FOIA DENIALS, FOIA APPEAL DENIALS, GAG ORDERS, NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS AND EVEN – “CLASSIFYING” INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COVER UP THEIR CRIMES AGAINST TARGETED INDIVIDUALS, ACTIVISTS AND JOURNALISTS.

Observe: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car, Q13 FOX News

See: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car

SEATTLE — A West Seattle man is sharing a surveillance movie that shows the scaring way thieves are using technology to break into cars.

See the movie as a man approaches Tom Dahl’s truck in this driveway. He attempts the treat, but the door is locked. So he takes off his backpack, moves it close to the window. Seconds later, he’s able to get inwards.

Photo Gallery

“He opens the door up,” says Dahl. “The lights went on, it was disarmed.”

Dahl is glad the thief didn’t take his truck. All he did was rummage through the contents of his glove compartment.

“I was wise enough not to carry anything of value in there. That’s what he was looking for.”

But Dahl is worried about how the thief got in so lightly.

“You used to have a wire that you glided down the window, when it was mechanical. But now it’s electronic.”

Cases like this are becoming more common across the region.

Lars Carlson says the man who broke into his car in January also appeared to be carrying something in a backpack.

“It’s running through codes automatically or it’s a button they’re pushing or something is happening. But whatever it does, it seems to trick the car into thinking he’s got the legitimate keys.”

Seattle police say they don’t know exactly what kind of device thieves are using, or how it works. But they are worried.

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

Dahl says automakers need to do something to give people a little more security. But until that happens, he’s going to share this movie with as many neighbors as he can.

“I hope other people pay attention, make sure things are secure and locked, and don’t keep things in your car that are of any value.”

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

thirty two comments

Slam1263 (@IKnowBO)

It is just a random code transmitter.

They can transmit a million codes with the shove of a button.

Tow truck driver have been using them for over twenty years.

Don’t the receivers limit the number of failed attempts per 2nd?

Sadly No they don’t

Rodger Wolkins

They need to emit a cloud of pepper burst after three failed attempts.

Fresh Man

Then cars in parking lots would permanently be admitting pepper dump, in a parking lot hundreds of remote keys are used permanently, so it has to be able to see signals without assuming it is failed attempts. They need to increase the complexity of the codes, add more bits, make it too hard to crack.

ashford
lionfan

Can very likely take the entire damn car if it uses keyless ignition, right?

Testicules

For most cars, the thief would still have to deal with the mechanical steering lock that is released by the mechanical portion of the key.

As for some cars that now have keyless shove button commence features… ?

clovellstc

The car permanently scans for the key. Since this is very likely just a device and sends out a bunch of signals in a row he wouldn’t know which one was for the car, so I doubt it would work on the ignition.

Phillip Coiner

I know how they are doing it. Have the cops send me an e-mail

john Bowler

Witness a classic Forrest Whitaker film “Ghost Dog”. The hero uses one of those code generators to steal luxury cars.

So, They may steal them from Tow Truck Drivers?

Tester

The device works by “pinging” the FOB on the key chain which, in turn, generates a signal to the vehicle. The device only works when the keys are within operational range of the vehicle.

Frank

This techbology isn’t fresh, over a decade old if anything. They demonstrated this in the movie, ‘Gone in sixty Seconds’.

Device is available on aliexpress from china for $600 or less. Clones key fobs and can transmit them. It’s not a mystery.

Thats not how they work. You need access to the original keys and the car to make a clone.

Most people keep their registration and garage door opener in their car. If a thief witnesses you leave your vehicle in a parking lot and can access your car this way, he can go to your home and rob it while you’re shopping or standing in the parking lot wondering where your car is.

Dan Darius

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

It’s a shame that cops are always reactive instead of proactive.

Dan Darius
Dee Ouchman

It’s a ordinary Tesla coil which energised the door lock/unlock servo.

Justa Joe

I don’t need a fresh car that badly. My two thousand five Ford Concentrate has manual (mechanical) doorlocks, manual (arm crank) windows, and a 5-speed manual transmission. Its also carrying 275,000 miles on the odometer.

I’m in no fear of anyone attempting to steal my wheels.

Marc M

Yes, we have the exact same car – two thousand five Ford Concentrate. Looks like a ruddy ordnance vehicle, but I like it because it has NOTHING (except AC). Manual trans, windows, everything. And a freakin’ metal key. I do not like this fresh crap. “The more the over-think the plumbing, the lighter it is to stop up the drain,” in the words of Scotty. And every journey to the stealership to fix the over-thought under-engineered geek fucktoys is an exercise on your wallet.

This is accomplish rubbish. The rolling code protocol (keyloq) used by keyless entry will only permit two hundred fifty six code attempts before the original key will need to be reset. This is a hoax.

George Johnson

Evidently the cops are NOT one step ahead of the criminals.

Starheart

There are too many COPS that ARE the CRIMINALS OUT THERE.

pithypaul

The thief is going to sue for invasion of his own privacy, as nobody asked him for permission to use his pic. Hey, this is Amerika.

SMARTERTHANYOU

Wow.. these reporters, especially the police department, are frankly imbeciles! The technology is over a decade old, it’s called a laptop and a receiver.

Starheart

Homeland Security Personnel are using very advanced electronic technology to hack into everything now.

People like Kay Griggs, Michael Hastings, Phillip Marshall, Judi Bari and myself have been targeted by some of these these special ops Homeland Security personnel involved in criminal operations in the US. They have been promoting and rewarding war criminals for years from the CIA and Military Black Sites and Torment Facilities, into Homeland Security, FBI, Law Enforcement, and other government agencies across the country, to target citizens for surveillance and crimes.

(See Kay Griggs movies on you tube, as she gives her testimonial for what has been going on for a long time now.)

Since 2011, I’ve been targeted for surveillance burglaries, vandalism, pet torment, vehicle tampering as well as the planting of stolen and unknown origin property and malicious prosecution. My safe deposit box in, Colville, WA ,was even burglarized. I can’t find any organization to help me, out of the dozens and dozens of civil and constitutional rights organizations and attorneys I’ve contacted. I had to get a private investigator to trace license plates and find out who some of the people involved in these targeted black operations are.

I can’t get my FOIA Requests fulfilled for information on my surveillance “Watch List” targeted crimes and it’s even common skill in Washington state that Homeland Security personnel are involved in my targeted surveillance and gang stalking crimes. There has even been one out of court settlement in one case in the Seattle area for these criminal activities by Homeland Security Personnel.

My cruise control stopped working on my one hundred forty mile journey back from Spokane WA, on Thursday February 26th (about two weeks ago), and I was gang stalked on the road by numerous vehicles (one of them with a Big Transformer Decal on the Back Window, one with a Big US “Infantry” sticker on his back window, as well as by WA license plate # WEPLAY2) and after they all turned off and I got past Colville, WA, I attempted my cruise control again and it began working. I know they have had remote control over my car alarms on my vehicles for a long time now, and it looks to me that they can also remote control my cruise control as well now……

They have been using FOIA DENIALS, FOIA APPEAL DENIALS, GAG ORDERS, NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS AND EVEN – “CLASSIFYING” INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COVER UP THEIR CRIMES AGAINST TARGETED INDIVIDUALS, ACTIVISTS AND JOURNALISTS.

Witness: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car, Q13 FOX News

Witness: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car

SEATTLE — A West Seattle man is sharing a surveillance movie that shows the scaring way thieves are using technology to break into cars.

Observe the movie as a man approaches Tom Dahl’s truck in this driveway. He attempts the treat, but the door is locked. So he takes off his backpack, moves it close to the window. Seconds later, he’s able to get inwards.

Photo Gallery

“He opens the door up,” says Dahl. “The lights went on, it was disarmed.”

Dahl is glad the thief didn’t take his truck. All he did was rummage through the contents of his glove compartment.

“I was clever enough not to carry anything of value in there. That’s what he was looking for.”

But Dahl is worried about how the thief got in so lightly.

“You used to have a wire that you slipped down the window, when it was mechanical. But now it’s electronic.”

Cases like this are becoming more common across the region.

Lars Carlson says the man who broke into his car in January also appeared to be carrying something in a backpack.

“It’s running through codes automatically or it’s a button they’re pushing or something is happening. But whatever it does, it seems to trick the car into thinking he’s got the legitimate keys.”

Seattle police say they don’t know exactly what kind of device thieves are using, or how it works. But they are worried.

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

Dahl says automakers need to do something to give people a little more security. But until that happens, he’s going to share this movie with as many neighbors as he can.

“I hope other people pay attention, make sure things are secure and locked, and don’t keep things in your car that are of any value.”

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

thirty two comments

Slam1263 (@IKnowBO)

It is just a random code transmitter.

They can transmit a million codes with the shove of a button.

Tow truck driver have been using them for over twenty years.

Don’t the receivers limit the number of failed attempts per 2nd?

Sadly No they don’t

Rodger Wolkins

They need to emit a cloud of pepper drizzle after three failed attempts.

Fresh Stud

Then cars in parking lots would permanently be admitting pepper drizzle, in a parking lot hundreds of remote keys are used permanently, so it has to be able to see signals without assuming it is failed attempts. They need to increase the complexity of the codes, add more bits, make it too hard to crack.

ashford
lionfan

Can most likely take the entire damn car if it uses keyless ignition, right?

Testicules

For most cars, the thief would still have to deal with the mechanical steering lock that is released by the mechanical portion of the key.

As for some cars that now have keyless shove button commence features… ?

clovellstc

The car permanently scans for the key. Since this is very likely just a device and sends out a bunch of signals in a row he wouldn’t know which one was for the car, so I doubt it would work on the ignition.

Phillip Coiner

I know how they are doing it. Have the cops send me an e-mail

john Bowler

See a classic Forrest Whitaker film “Ghost Dog”. The hero uses one of those code generators to steal luxury cars.

So, They may steal them from Tow Truck Drivers?

Tester

The device works by “pinging” the FOB on the key chain which, in turn, generates a signal to the vehicle. The device only works when the keys are within operational range of the vehicle.

Frank

This techbology isn’t fresh, over a decade old if anything. They demonstrated this in the movie, ‘Gone in sixty Seconds’.

Device is available on aliexpress from china for $600 or less. Clones key fobs and can transmit them. It’s not a mystery.

Thats not how they work. You need access to the original keys and the car to make a clone.

Most people keep their registration and garage door opener in their car. If a thief observes you leave your vehicle in a parking lot and can access your car this way, he can go to your home and rob it while you’re shopping or standing in the parking lot wondering where your car is.

Dan Darius

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

It’s a shame that cops are always reactive instead of proactive.

Dan Darius
Dee Ouchman

It’s a elementary Tesla coil which energised the door lock/unlock servo.

Justa Joe

I don’t need a fresh car that badly. My two thousand five Ford Concentrate has manual (mechanical) doorlocks, manual (arm crank) windows, and a 5-speed manual transmission. Its also carrying 275,000 miles on the odometer.

I’m in no fear of anyone attempting to steal my wheels.

Marc M

Yes, we have the exact same car – two thousand five Ford Concentrate. Looks like a ruddy ordnance vehicle, but I like it because it has NOTHING (except AC). Manual trans, windows, everything. And a freakin’ metal key. I do not like this fresh crap. “The more the over-think the plumbing, the lighter it is to stop up the drain,” in the words of Scotty. And every tour to the stealership to fix the over-thought under-engineered geek fucktoys is an exercise on your wallet.

This is finish rubbish. The rolling code protocol (keyloq) used by keyless entry will only permit two hundred fifty six code attempts before the original key will need to be reset. This is a hoax.

George Johnson

Evidently the cops are NOT one step ahead of the criminals.

Starheart

There are too many COPS that ARE the CRIMINALS OUT THERE.

pithypaul

The thief is going to sue for invasion of his own privacy, as nobody asked him for permission to use his photo. Hey, this is Amerika.

SMARTERTHANYOU

Wow.. these reporters, especially the police department, are frankly imbeciles! The technology is over a decade old, it’s called a laptop and a receiver.

Starheart

Homeland Security Personnel are using very advanced electronic technology to hack into everything now.

People like Kay Griggs, Michael Hastings, Phillip Marshall, Judi Bari and myself have been targeted by some of these these special ops Homeland Security personnel involved in criminal operations in the US. They have been promoting and rewarding war criminals for years from the CIA and Military Black Sites and Torment Facilities, into Homeland Security, FBI, Law Enforcement, and other government agencies across the country, to target citizens for surveillance and crimes.

(See Kay Griggs movies on you tube, as she gives her testimonial for what has been going on for a long time now.)

Since 2011, I’ve been targeted for surveillance burglaries, vandalism, pet torment, vehicle tampering as well as the planting of stolen and unknown origin property and malicious prosecution. My safe deposit box in, Colville, WA ,was even burglarized. I can’t find any organization to help me, out of the dozens and dozens of civil and constitutional rights organizations and attorneys I’ve contacted. I had to get a private investigator to trace license plates and find out who some of the people involved in these targeted black operations are.

I can’t get my FOIA Requests fulfilled for information on my surveillance “Watch List” targeted crimes and it’s even common skill in Washington state that Homeland Security personnel are involved in my targeted surveillance and gang stalking crimes. There has even been one out of court settlement in one case in the Seattle area for these criminal activities by Homeland Security Personnel.

My cruise control stopped working on my one hundred forty mile journey back from Spokane WA, on Thursday February 26th (about two weeks ago), and I was gang stalked on the road by numerous vehicles (one of them with a Big Transformer Decal on the Back Window, one with a Big US “Infantry” sticker on his back window, as well as by WA license plate # WEPLAY2) and after they all turned off and I got past Colville, WA, I attempted my cruise control again and it embarked working. I know they have had remote control over my car alarms on my vehicles for a long time now, and it looks to me that they can also remote control my cruise control as well now……

They have been using FOIA DENIALS, FOIA APPEAL DENIALS, GAG ORDERS, NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS AND EVEN – “CLASSIFYING” INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COVER UP THEIR CRIMES AGAINST TARGETED INDIVIDUALS, ACTIVISTS AND JOURNALISTS.

Observe: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car, Q13 FOX News

See: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car

SEATTLE — A West Seattle man is sharing a surveillance movie that shows the scaring way thieves are using technology to break into cars.

See the movie as a man approaches Tom Dahl’s truck in this driveway. He attempts the treat, but the door is locked. So he takes off his backpack, moves it close to the window. Seconds later, he’s able to get inwards.

Photo Gallery

“He opens the door up,” says Dahl. “The lights went on, it was disarmed.”

Dahl is glad the thief didn’t take his truck. All he did was rummage through the contents of his glove compartment.

“I was wise enough not to carry anything of value in there. That’s what he was looking for.”

But Dahl is worried about how the thief got in so lightly.

“You used to have a wire that you slipped down the window, when it was mechanical. But now it’s electronic.”

Cases like this are becoming more common across the region.

Lars Carlson says the man who broke into his car in January also appeared to be carrying something in a backpack.

“It’s running through codes automatically or it’s a button they’re pushing or something is happening. But whatever it does, it seems to trick the car into thinking he’s got the legitimate keys.”

Seattle police say they don’t know exactly what kind of device thieves are using, or how it works. But they are worried.

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

Dahl says automakers need to do something to give people a little more security. But until that happens, he’s going to share this movie with as many neighbors as he can.

“I hope other people pay attention, make sure things are secure and locked, and don’t keep things in your car that are of any value.”

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

thirty two comments

Slam1263 (@IKnowBO)

It is just a random code transmitter.

They can transmit a million codes with the thrust of a button.

Tow truck driver have been using them for over twenty years.

Don’t the receivers limit the number of failed attempts per 2nd?

Sadly No they don’t

Rodger Wolkins

They need to emit a cloud of pepper unload after three failed attempts.

Fresh Boy

Then cars in parking lots would permanently be admitting pepper splatter, in a parking lot hundreds of remote keys are used permanently, so it has to be able to see signals without assuming it is failed attempts. They need to increase the complexity of the codes, add more bits, make it too hard to crack.

ashford
lionfan

Can most likely take the entire damn car if it uses keyless ignition, right?

Testicules

For most cars, the thief would still have to deal with the mechanical steering lock that is released by the mechanical portion of the key.

As for some cars that now have keyless shove button embark features… ?

clovellstc

The car permanently scans for the key. Since this is most likely just a device and sends out a bunch of signals in a row he wouldn’t know which one was for the car, so I doubt it would work on the ignition.

Phillip Coiner

I know how they are doing it. Have the cops send me an e-mail

john Bowler

Observe a classic Forrest Whitaker film “Ghost Dog”. The hero uses one of those code generators to steal luxury cars.

So, They may steal them from Tow Truck Drivers?

Tester

The device works by “pinging” the FOB on the key chain which, in turn, generates a signal to the vehicle. The device only works when the keys are within operational range of the vehicle.

Frank

This techbology isn’t fresh, over a decade old if anything. They demonstrated this in the movie, ‘Gone in sixty Seconds’.

Device is available on aliexpress from china for $600 or less. Clones key fobs and can transmit them. It’s not a mystery.

Thats not how they work. You need access to the original keys and the car to make a clone.

Most people keep their registration and garage door opener in their car. If a thief observes you leave your vehicle in a parking lot and can access your car this way, he can go to your home and rob it while you’re shopping or standing in the parking lot wondering where your car is.

Dan Darius

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

It’s a shame that cops are always reactive instead of proactive.

Dan Darius
Dee Ouchman

It’s a elementary Tesla coil which energised the door lock/unlock servo.

Justa Joe

I don’t need a fresh car that badly. My two thousand five Ford Concentrate has manual (mechanical) doorlocks, manual (palm crank) windows, and a 5-speed manual transmission. Its also carrying 275,000 miles on the odometer.

I’m in no fear of anyone attempting to steal my wheels.

Marc M

Yes, we have the exact same car – two thousand five Ford Concentrate. Looks like a ruddy ordnance vehicle, but I like it because it has NOTHING (except AC). Manual trans, windows, everything. And a freakin’ metal key. I do not like this fresh crap. “The more the over-think the plumbing, the lighter it is to stop up the drain,” in the words of Scotty. And every excursion to the stealership to fix the over-thought under-engineered geek fucktoys is an exercise on your wallet.

This is accomplish rubbish. The rolling code protocol (keyloq) used by keyless entry will only permit two hundred fifty six code attempts before the original key will need to be reset. This is a hoax.

George Johnson

Evidently the cops are NOT one step ahead of the criminals.

Starheart

There are too many COPS that ARE the CRIMINALS OUT THERE.

pithypaul

The thief is going to sue for invasion of his own privacy, as nobody asked him for permission to use his pic. Hey, this is Amerika.

SMARTERTHANYOU

Wow.. these reporters, especially the police department, are frankly imbeciles! The technology is over a decade old, it’s called a laptop and a receiver.

Starheart

Homeland Security Personnel are using very advanced electronic technology to hack into everything now.

People like Kay Griggs, Michael Hastings, Phillip Marshall, Judi Bari and myself have been targeted by some of these these special ops Homeland Security personnel involved in criminal operations in the US. They have been promoting and rewarding war criminals for years from the CIA and Military Black Sites and Torment Facilities, into Homeland Security, FBI, Law Enforcement, and other government agencies across the country, to target citizens for surveillance and crimes.

(Observe Kay Griggs movies on you tube, as she gives her testimonial for what has been going on for a long time now.)

Since 2011, I’ve been targeted for surveillance burglaries, vandalism, pet torment, vehicle tampering as well as the planting of stolen and unknown origin property and malicious prosecution. My safe deposit box in, Colville, WA ,was even burglarized. I can’t find any organization to help me, out of the dozens and dozens of civil and constitutional rights organizations and attorneys I’ve contacted. I had to get a private investigator to trace license plates and find out who some of the people involved in these targeted black operations are.

I can’t get my FOIA Requests fulfilled for information on my surveillance “Watch List” targeted crimes and it’s even common skill in Washington state that Homeland Security personnel are involved in my targeted surveillance and gang stalking crimes. There has even been one out of court settlement in one case in the Seattle area for these criminal activities by Homeland Security Personnel.

My cruise control stopped working on my one hundred forty mile journey back from Spokane WA, on Thursday February 26th (about two weeks ago), and I was gang stalked on the road by numerous vehicles (one of them with a Big Transformer Decal on the Back Window, one with a Big US “Infantry” sticker on his back window, as well as by WA license plate # WEPLAY2) and after they all turned off and I got past Colville, WA, I attempted my cruise control again and it embarked working. I know they have had remote control over my car alarms on my vehicles for a long time now, and it looks to me that they can also remote control my cruise control as well now……

They have been using FOIA DENIALS, FOIA APPEAL DENIALS, GAG ORDERS, NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS AND EVEN – “CLASSIFYING” INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COVER UP THEIR CRIMES AGAINST TARGETED INDIVIDUALS, ACTIVISTS AND JOURNALISTS.

Observe: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car, Q13 FOX News

See: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car

SEATTLE — A West Seattle man is sharing a surveillance movie that shows the scaring way thieves are using technology to break into cars.

Observe the movie as a man approaches Tom Dahl’s truck in this driveway. He attempts the treat, but the door is locked. So he takes off his backpack, moves it close to the window. Seconds later, he’s able to get inwards.

Photo Gallery

“He opens the door up,” says Dahl. “The lights went on, it was disarmed.”

Dahl is glad the thief didn’t take his truck. All he did was rummage through the contents of his glove compartment.

“I was brainy enough not to carry anything of value in there. That’s what he was looking for.”

But Dahl is worried about how the thief got in so lightly.

“You used to have a wire that you glided down the window, when it was mechanical. But now it’s electronic.”

Cases like this are becoming more common across the region.

Lars Carlson says the man who broke into his car in January also appeared to be carrying something in a backpack.

“It’s running through codes automatically or it’s a button they’re pushing or something is happening. But whatever it does, it seems to trick the car into thinking he’s got the legitimate keys.”

Seattle police say they don’t know exactly what kind of device thieves are using, or how it works. But they are worried.

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

Dahl says automakers need to do something to give people a little more security. But until that happens, he’s going to share this movie with as many neighbors as he can.

“I hope other people pay attention, make sure things are secure and locked, and don’t keep things in your car that are of any value.”

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

thirty two comments

Slam1263 (@IKnowBO)

It is just a random code transmitter.

They can transmit a million codes with the thrust of a button.

Tow truck driver have been using them for over twenty years.

Don’t the receivers limit the number of failed attempts per 2nd?

Sadly No they don’t

Rodger Wolkins

They need to emit a cloud of pepper splash after three failed attempts.

Fresh Dude

Then cars in parking lots would permanently be admitting pepper dump, in a parking lot hundreds of remote keys are used permanently, so it has to be able to see signals without assuming it is failed attempts. They need to increase the complexity of the codes, add more bits, make it too hard to crack.

ashford
lionfan

Can very likely take the entire damn car if it uses keyless ignition, right?

Testicules

For most cars, the thief would still have to deal with the mechanical steering lock that is released by the mechanical portion of the key.

As for some cars that now have keyless shove button commence features… ?

clovellstc

The car permanently scans for the key. Since this is most likely just a device and sends out a bunch of signals in a row he wouldn’t know which one was for the car, so I doubt it would work on the ignition.

Phillip Coiner

I know how they are doing it. Have the cops send me an e-mail

john Bowler

See a classic Forrest Whitaker film “Ghost Dog”. The hero uses one of those code generators to steal luxury cars.

So, They may steal them from Tow Truck Drivers?

Tester

The device works by “pinging” the FOB on the key chain which, in turn, generates a signal to the vehicle. The device only works when the keys are within operational range of the vehicle.

Frank

This techbology isn’t fresh, over a decade old if anything. They demonstrated this in the movie, ‘Gone in sixty Seconds’.

Device is available on aliexpress from china for $600 or less. Clones key fobs and can transmit them. It’s not a mystery.

Thats not how they work. You need access to the original keys and the car to make a clone.

Most people keep their registration and garage door opener in their car. If a thief sees you leave your vehicle in a parking lot and can access your car this way, he can go to your home and rob it while you’re shopping or standing in the parking lot wondering where your car is.

Dan Darius

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

It’s a shame that cops are always reactive instead of proactive.

Dan Darius
Dee Ouchman

It’s a plain Tesla coil which energised the door lock/unlock servo.

Justa Joe

I don’t need a fresh car that badly. My two thousand five Ford Concentrate has manual (mechanical) doorlocks, manual (mitt crank) windows, and a 5-speed manual transmission. Its also carrying 275,000 miles on the odometer.

I’m in no fear of anyone attempting to steal my wheels.

Marc M

Yes, we have the exact same car – two thousand five Ford Concentrate. Looks like a ruddy ordnance vehicle, but I like it because it has NOTHING (except AC). Manual trans, windows, everything. And a freakin’ metal key. I do not like this fresh crap. “The more the over-think the plumbing, the lighter it is to stop up the drain,” in the words of Scotty. And every tour to the stealership to fix the over-thought under-engineered geek fucktoys is an exercise on your wallet.

This is finish rubbish. The rolling code protocol (keyloq) used by keyless entry will only permit two hundred fifty six code attempts before the original key will need to be reset. This is a hoax.

George Johnson

Evidently the cops are NOT one step ahead of the criminals.

Starheart

There are too many COPS that ARE the CRIMINALS OUT THERE.

pithypaul

The thief is going to sue for invasion of his own privacy, as nobody asked him for permission to use his picture. Hey, this is Amerika.

SMARTERTHANYOU

Wow.. these reporters, especially the police department, are frankly imbeciles! The technology is over a decade old, it’s called a laptop and a receiver.

Starheart

Homeland Security Personnel are using very advanced electronic technology to hack into everything now.

People like Kay Griggs, Michael Hastings, Phillip Marshall, Judi Bari and myself have been targeted by some of these these special ops Homeland Security personnel involved in criminal operations in the US. They have been promoting and rewarding war criminals for years from the CIA and Military Black Sites and Torment Facilities, into Homeland Security, FBI, Law Enforcement, and other government agencies across the country, to target citizens for surveillance and crimes.

(Witness Kay Griggs movies on you tube, as she gives her testimonial for what has been going on for a long time now.)

Since 2011, I’ve been targeted for surveillance burglaries, vandalism, pet torment, vehicle tampering as well as the planting of stolen and unknown origin property and malicious prosecution. My safe deposit box in, Colville, WA ,was even burglarized. I can’t find any organization to help me, out of the dozens and dozens of civil and constitutional rights organizations and attorneys I’ve contacted. I had to get a private investigator to trace license plates and find out who some of the people involved in these targeted black operations are.

I can’t get my FOIA Requests fulfilled for information on my surveillance “Watch List” targeted crimes and it’s even common skill in Washington state that Homeland Security personnel are involved in my targeted surveillance and gang stalking crimes. There has even been one out of court settlement in one case in the Seattle area for these criminal activities by Homeland Security Personnel.

My cruise control stopped working on my one hundred forty mile tour back from Spokane WA, on Thursday February 26th (about two weeks ago), and I was gang stalked on the road by numerous vehicles (one of them with a Big Transformer Decal on the Back Window, one with a Big US “Infantry” sticker on his back window, as well as by WA license plate # WEPLAY2) and after they all turned off and I got past Colville, WA, I attempted my cruise control again and it commenced working. I know they have had remote control over my car alarms on my vehicles for a long time now, and it looks to me that they can also remote control my cruise control as well now……

They have been using FOIA DENIALS, FOIA APPEAL DENIALS, GAG ORDERS, NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS AND EVEN – “CLASSIFYING” INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COVER UP THEIR CRIMES AGAINST TARGETED INDIVIDUALS, ACTIVISTS AND JOURNALISTS.

Observe: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car, Q13 FOX News

Observe: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car

SEATTLE — A West Seattle man is sharing a surveillance movie that shows the scaring way thieves are using technology to break into cars.

Observe the movie as a man approaches Tom Dahl’s truck in this driveway. He attempts the treat, but the door is locked. So he takes off his backpack, moves it close to the window. Seconds later, he’s able to get inwards.

Photo Gallery

“He opens the door up,” says Dahl. “The lights went on, it was disarmed.”

Dahl is glad the thief didn’t take his truck. All he did was rummage through the contents of his glove compartment.

“I was brainy enough not to carry anything of value in there. That’s what he was looking for.”

But Dahl is worried about how the thief got in so lightly.

“You used to have a wire that you slipped down the window, when it was mechanical. But now it’s electronic.”

Cases like this are becoming more common across the region.

Lars Carlson says the man who broke into his car in January also appeared to be carrying something in a backpack.

“It’s running through codes automatically or it’s a button they’re pushing or something is happening. But whatever it does, it seems to trick the car into thinking he’s got the legitimate keys.”

Seattle police say they don’t know exactly what kind of device thieves are using, or how it works. But they are worried.

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

Dahl says automakers need to do something to give people a little more security. But until that happens, he’s going to share this movie with as many neighbors as he can.

“I hope other people pay attention, make sure things are secure and locked, and don’t keep things in your car that are of any value.”

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

thirty two comments

Slam1263 (@IKnowBO)

It is just a random code transmitter.

They can transmit a million codes with the shove of a button.

Tow truck driver have been using them for over twenty years.

Don’t the receivers limit the number of failed attempts per 2nd?

Sadly No they don’t

Rodger Wolkins

They need to emit a cloud of pepper unload after three failed attempts.

Fresh Boy

Then cars in parking lots would permanently be admitting pepper bust, in a parking lot hundreds of remote keys are used permanently, so it has to be able to see signals without assuming it is failed attempts. They need to increase the complexity of the codes, add more bits, make it too hard to crack.

ashford
lionfan

Can very likely take the entire damn car if it uses keyless ignition, right?

Testicules

For most cars, the thief would still have to deal with the mechanical steering lock that is released by the mechanical portion of the key.

As for some cars that now have keyless shove button begin features… ?

clovellstc

The car permanently scans for the key. Since this is very likely just a device and sends out a bunch of signals in a row he wouldn’t know which one was for the car, so I doubt it would work on the ignition.

Phillip Coiner

I know how they are doing it. Have the cops send me an e-mail

john Bowler

See a classic Forrest Whitaker film “Ghost Dog”. The hero uses one of those code generators to steal luxury cars.

So, They may steal them from Tow Truck Drivers?

Tester

The device works by “pinging” the FOB on the key chain which, in turn, generates a signal to the vehicle. The device only works when the keys are within operational range of the vehicle.

Frank

This techbology isn’t fresh, over a decade old if anything. They demonstrated this in the movie, ‘Gone in sixty Seconds’.

Device is available on aliexpress from china for $600 or less. Clones key fobs and can transmit them. It’s not a mystery.

Thats not how they work. You need access to the original keys and the car to make a clone.

Most people keep their registration and garage door opener in their car. If a thief observes you leave your vehicle in a parking lot and can access your car this way, he can go to your home and rob it while you’re shopping or standing in the parking lot wondering where your car is.

Dan Darius

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

It’s a shame that cops are always reactive instead of proactive.

Dan Darius
Dee Ouchman

It’s a plain Tesla coil which energised the door lock/unlock servo.

Justa Joe

I don’t need a fresh car that badly. My two thousand five Ford Concentrate has manual (mechanical) doorlocks, manual (forearm crank) windows, and a 5-speed manual transmission. Its also carrying 275,000 miles on the odometer.

I’m in no fear of anyone attempting to steal my wheels.

Marc M

Yes, we have the exact same car – two thousand five Ford Concentrate. Looks like a ruddy ordnance vehicle, but I like it because it has NOTHING (except AC). Manual trans, windows, everything. And a freakin’ metal key. I do not like this fresh crap. “The more the over-think the plumbing, the lighter it is to stop up the drain,” in the words of Scotty. And every excursion to the stealership to fix the over-thought under-engineered geek fucktoys is an exercise on your wallet.

This is accomplish rubbish. The rolling code protocol (keyloq) used by keyless entry will only permit two hundred fifty six code attempts before the original key will need to be reset. This is a hoax.

George Johnson

Evidently the cops are NOT one step ahead of the criminals.

Starheart

There are too many COPS that ARE the CRIMINALS OUT THERE.

pithypaul

The thief is going to sue for invasion of his own privacy, as nobody asked him for permission to use his pic. Hey, this is Amerika.

SMARTERTHANYOU

Wow.. these reporters, especially the police department, are frankly imbeciles! The technology is over a decade old, it’s called a laptop and a receiver.

Starheart

Homeland Security Personnel are using very advanced electronic technology to hack into everything now.

People like Kay Griggs, Michael Hastings, Phillip Marshall, Judi Bari and myself have been targeted by some of these these special ops Homeland Security personnel involved in criminal operations in the US. They have been promoting and rewarding war criminals for years from the CIA and Military Black Sites and Torment Facilities, into Homeland Security, FBI, Law Enforcement, and other government agencies across the country, to target citizens for surveillance and crimes.

(See Kay Griggs movies on you tube, as she gives her testimonial for what has been going on for a long time now.)

Since 2011, I’ve been targeted for surveillance burglaries, vandalism, pet torment, vehicle tampering as well as the planting of stolen and unknown origin property and malicious prosecution. My safe deposit box in, Colville, WA ,was even burglarized. I can’t find any organization to help me, out of the dozens and dozens of civil and constitutional rights organizations and attorneys I’ve contacted. I had to get a private investigator to trace license plates and find out who some of the people involved in these targeted black operations are.

I can’t get my FOIA Requests fulfilled for information on my surveillance “Watch List” targeted crimes and it’s even common skill in Washington state that Homeland Security personnel are involved in my targeted surveillance and gang stalking crimes. There has even been one out of court settlement in one case in the Seattle area for these criminal activities by Homeland Security Personnel.

My cruise control stopped working on my one hundred forty mile excursion back from Spokane WA, on Thursday February 26th (about two weeks ago), and I was gang stalked on the road by numerous vehicles (one of them with a Big Transformer Decal on the Back Window, one with a Big US “Infantry” sticker on his back window, as well as by WA license plate # WEPLAY2) and after they all turned off and I got past Colville, WA, I attempted my cruise control again and it commenced working. I know they have had remote control over my car alarms on my vehicles for a long time now, and it looks to me that they can also remote control my cruise control as well now……

They have been using FOIA DENIALS, FOIA APPEAL DENIALS, GAG ORDERS, NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS AND EVEN – “CLASSIFYING” INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COVER UP THEIR CRIMES AGAINST TARGETED INDIVIDUALS, ACTIVISTS AND JOURNALISTS.

Observe: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car, Q13 FOX News

See: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car

SEATTLE — A West Seattle man is sharing a surveillance movie that shows the panicking way thieves are using technology to break into cars.

Observe the movie as a man approaches Tom Dahl’s truck in this driveway. He attempts the treat, but the door is locked. So he takes off his backpack, moves it close to the window. Seconds later, he’s able to get inwards.

Photo Gallery

“He opens the door up,” says Dahl. “The lights went on, it was disarmed.”

Dahl is glad the thief didn’t take his truck. All he did was rummage through the contents of his glove compartment.

“I was wise enough not to carry anything of value in there. That’s what he was looking for.”

But Dahl is worried about how the thief got in so lightly.

“You used to have a wire that you slipped down the window, when it was mechanical. But now it’s electronic.”

Cases like this are becoming more common across the region.

Lars Carlson says the man who broke into his car in January also appeared to be carrying something in a backpack.

“It’s running through codes automatically or it’s a button they’re pushing or something is happening. But whatever it does, it seems to trick the car into thinking he’s got the legitimate keys.”

Seattle police say they don’t know exactly what kind of device thieves are using, or how it works. But they are worried.

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

Dahl says automakers need to do something to give people a little more security. But until that happens, he’s going to share this movie with as many neighbors as he can.

“I hope other people pay attention, make sure things are secure and locked, and don’t keep things in your car that are of any value.”

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

thirty two comments

Slam1263 (@IKnowBO)

It is just a random code transmitter.

They can transmit a million codes with the thrust of a button.

Tow truck driver have been using them for over twenty years.

Don’t the receivers limit the number of failed attempts per 2nd?

Sadly No they don’t

Rodger Wolkins

They need to emit a cloud of pepper dump after three failed attempts.

Fresh Boy

Then cars in parking lots would permanently be admitting pepper dump, in a parking lot hundreds of remote keys are used permanently, so it has to be able to see signals without assuming it is failed attempts. They need to increase the complexity of the codes, add more bits, make it too hard to crack.

ashford
lionfan

Can most likely take the entire damn car if it uses keyless ignition, right?

Testicules

For most cars, the thief would still have to deal with the mechanical steering lock that is released by the mechanical portion of the key.

As for some cars that now have keyless thrust button begin features… ?

clovellstc

The car permanently scans for the key. Since this is most likely just a device and sends out a bunch of signals in a row he wouldn’t know which one was for the car, so I doubt it would work on the ignition.

Phillip Coiner

I know how they are doing it. Have the cops send me an e-mail

john Bowler

Witness a classic Forrest Whitaker film “Ghost Dog”. The hero uses one of those code generators to steal luxury cars.

So, They may steal them from Tow Truck Drivers?

Tester

The device works by “pinging” the FOB on the key chain which, in turn, generates a signal to the vehicle. The device only works when the keys are within operational range of the vehicle.

Frank

This techbology isn’t fresh, over a decade old if anything. They demonstrated this in the movie, ‘Gone in sixty Seconds’.

Device is available on aliexpress from china for $600 or less. Clones key fobs and can transmit them. It’s not a mystery.

Thats not how they work. You need access to the original keys and the car to make a clone.

Most people keep their registration and garage door opener in their car. If a thief witnesses you leave your vehicle in a parking lot and can access your car this way, he can go to your home and rob it while you’re shopping or standing in the parking lot wondering where your car is.

Dan Darius

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

It’s a shame that cops are always reactive instead of proactive.

Dan Darius
Dee Ouchman

It’s a ordinary Tesla coil which energised the door lock/unlock servo.

Justa Joe

I don’t need a fresh car that badly. My two thousand five Ford Concentrate has manual (mechanical) doorlocks, manual (mitt crank) windows, and a 5-speed manual transmission. Its also carrying 275,000 miles on the odometer.

I’m in no fear of anyone attempting to steal my wheels.

Marc M

Yes, we have the exact same car – two thousand five Ford Concentrate. Looks like a ruddy ordnance vehicle, but I like it because it has NOTHING (except AC). Manual trans, windows, everything. And a freakin’ metal key. I do not like this fresh crap. “The more the over-think the plumbing, the lighter it is to stop up the drain,” in the words of Scotty. And every journey to the stealership to fix the over-thought under-engineered geek fucktoys is an exercise on your wallet.

This is accomplish rubbish. The rolling code protocol (keyloq) used by keyless entry will only permit two hundred fifty six code attempts before the original key will need to be reset. This is a hoax.

George Johnson

Evidently the cops are NOT one step ahead of the criminals.

Starheart

There are too many COPS that ARE the CRIMINALS OUT THERE.

pithypaul

The thief is going to sue for invasion of his own privacy, as nobody asked him for permission to use his picture. Hey, this is Amerika.

SMARTERTHANYOU

Wow.. these reporters, especially the police department, are frankly imbeciles! The technology is over a decade old, it’s called a laptop and a receiver.

Starheart

Homeland Security Personnel are using very advanced electronic technology to hack into everything now.

People like Kay Griggs, Michael Hastings, Phillip Marshall, Judi Bari and myself have been targeted by some of these these special ops Homeland Security personnel involved in criminal operations in the US. They have been promoting and rewarding war criminals for years from the CIA and Military Black Sites and Torment Facilities, into Homeland Security, FBI, Law Enforcement, and other government agencies across the country, to target citizens for surveillance and crimes.

(Observe Kay Griggs movies on you tube, as she gives her testimonial for what has been going on for a long time now.)

Since 2011, I’ve been targeted for surveillance burglaries, vandalism, pet torment, vehicle tampering as well as the planting of stolen and unknown origin property and malicious prosecution. My safe deposit box in, Colville, WA ,was even burglarized. I can’t find any organization to help me, out of the dozens and dozens of civil and constitutional rights organizations and attorneys I’ve contacted. I had to get a private investigator to trace license plates and find out who some of the people involved in these targeted black operations are.

I can’t get my FOIA Requests fulfilled for information on my surveillance “Watch List” targeted crimes and it’s even common skill in Washington state that Homeland Security personnel are involved in my targeted surveillance and gang stalking crimes. There has even been one out of court settlement in one case in the Seattle area for these criminal activities by Homeland Security Personnel.

My cruise control stopped working on my one hundred forty mile journey back from Spokane WA, on Thursday February 26th (about two weeks ago), and I was gang stalked on the road by numerous vehicles (one of them with a Big Transformer Decal on the Back Window, one with a Big US “Infantry” sticker on his back window, as well as by WA license plate # WEPLAY2) and after they all turned off and I got past Colville, WA, I attempted my cruise control again and it began working. I know they have had remote control over my car alarms on my vehicles for a long time now, and it looks to me that they can also remote control my cruise control as well now……

They have been using FOIA DENIALS, FOIA APPEAL DENIALS, GAG ORDERS, NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS AND EVEN – “CLASSIFYING” INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COVER UP THEIR CRIMES AGAINST TARGETED INDIVIDUALS, ACTIVISTS AND JOURNALISTS.

Witness: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car, Q13 FOX News

Observe: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car

SEATTLE — A West Seattle man is sharing a surveillance movie that shows the panicking way thieves are using technology to break into cars.

Witness the movie as a man approaches Tom Dahl’s truck in this driveway. He attempts the treat, but the door is locked. So he takes off his backpack, moves it close to the window. Seconds later, he’s able to get inwards.

Photo Gallery

“He opens the door up,” says Dahl. “The lights went on, it was disarmed.”

Dahl is glad the thief didn’t take his truck. All he did was rummage through the contents of his glove compartment.

“I was clever enough not to carry anything of value in there. That’s what he was looking for.”

But Dahl is worried about how the thief got in so lightly.

“You used to have a wire that you slipped down the window, when it was mechanical. But now it’s electronic.”

Cases like this are becoming more common across the region.

Lars Carlson says the man who broke into his car in January also appeared to be carrying something in a backpack.

“It’s running through codes automatically or it’s a button they’re pushing or something is happening. But whatever it does, it seems to trick the car into thinking he’s got the legitimate keys.”

Seattle police say they don’t know exactly what kind of device thieves are using, or how it works. But they are worried.

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

Dahl says automakers need to do something to give people a little more security. But until that happens, he’s going to share this movie with as many neighbors as he can.

“I hope other people pay attention, make sure things are secure and locked, and don’t keep things in your car that are of any value.”

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

thirty two comments

Slam1263 (@IKnowBO)

It is just a random code transmitter.

They can transmit a million codes with the thrust of a button.

Tow truck driver have been using them for over twenty years.

Don’t the receivers limit the number of failed attempts per 2nd?

Sadly No they don’t

Rodger Wolkins

They need to emit a cloud of pepper unload after three failed attempts.

Fresh Dude

Then cars in parking lots would permanently be admitting pepper dump, in a parking lot hundreds of remote keys are used permanently, so it has to be able to see signals without assuming it is failed attempts. They need to increase the complexity of the codes, add more bits, make it too hard to crack.

ashford
lionfan

Can very likely take the entire damn car if it uses keyless ignition, right?

Testicules

For most cars, the thief would still have to deal with the mechanical steering lock that is released by the mechanical portion of the key.

As for some cars that now have keyless shove button begin features… ?

clovellstc

The car permanently scans for the key. Since this is most likely just a device and sends out a bunch of signals in a row he wouldn’t know which one was for the car, so I doubt it would work on the ignition.

Phillip Coiner

I know how they are doing it. Have the cops send me an e-mail

john Bowler

Witness a classic Forrest Whitaker film “Ghost Dog”. The hero uses one of those code generators to steal luxury cars.

So, They may steal them from Tow Truck Drivers?

Tester

The device works by “pinging” the FOB on the key chain which, in turn, generates a signal to the vehicle. The device only works when the keys are within operational range of the vehicle.

Frank

This techbology isn’t fresh, over a decade old if anything. They demonstrated this in the movie, ‘Gone in sixty Seconds’.

Device is available on aliexpress from china for $600 or less. Clones key fobs and can transmit them. It’s not a mystery.

Thats not how they work. You need access to the original keys and the car to make a clone.

Most people keep their registration and garage door opener in their car. If a thief sees you leave your vehicle in a parking lot and can access your car this way, he can go to your home and rob it while you’re shopping or standing in the parking lot wondering where your car is.

Dan Darius

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

It’s a shame that cops are always reactive instead of proactive.

Dan Darius
Dee Ouchman

It’s a elementary Tesla coil which energised the door lock/unlock servo.

Justa Joe

I don’t need a fresh car that badly. My two thousand five Ford Concentrate has manual (mechanical) doorlocks, manual (forearm crank) windows, and a 5-speed manual transmission. Its also carrying 275,000 miles on the odometer.

I’m in no fear of anyone attempting to steal my wheels.

Marc M

Yes, we have the exact same car – two thousand five Ford Concentrate. Looks like a ruddy ordnance vehicle, but I like it because it has NOTHING (except AC). Manual trans, windows, everything. And a freakin’ metal key. I do not like this fresh crap. “The more the over-think the plumbing, the lighter it is to stop up the drain,” in the words of Scotty. And every excursion to the stealership to fix the over-thought under-engineered geek fucktoys is an exercise on your wallet.

This is finish rubbish. The rolling code protocol (keyloq) used by keyless entry will only permit two hundred fifty six code attempts before the original key will need to be reset. This is a hoax.

George Johnson

Evidently the cops are NOT one step ahead of the criminals.

Starheart

There are too many COPS that ARE the CRIMINALS OUT THERE.

pithypaul

The thief is going to sue for invasion of his own privacy, as nobody asked him for permission to use his photo. Hey, this is Amerika.

SMARTERTHANYOU

Wow.. these reporters, especially the police department, are frankly imbeciles! The technology is over a decade old, it’s called a laptop and a receiver.

Starheart

Homeland Security Personnel are using very advanced electronic technology to hack into everything now.

People like Kay Griggs, Michael Hastings, Phillip Marshall, Judi Bari and myself have been targeted by some of these these special ops Homeland Security personnel involved in criminal operations in the US. They have been promoting and rewarding war criminals for years from the CIA and Military Black Sites and Torment Facilities, into Homeland Security, FBI, Law Enforcement, and other government agencies across the country, to target citizens for surveillance and crimes.

(Observe Kay Griggs movies on you tube, as she gives her testimonial for what has been going on for a long time now.)

Since 2011, I’ve been targeted for surveillance burglaries, vandalism, pet torment, vehicle tampering as well as the planting of stolen and unknown origin property and malicious prosecution. My safe deposit box in, Colville, WA ,was even burglarized. I can’t find any organization to help me, out of the dozens and dozens of civil and constitutional rights organizations and attorneys I’ve contacted. I had to get a private investigator to trace license plates and find out who some of the people involved in these targeted black operations are.

I can’t get my FOIA Requests fulfilled for information on my surveillance “Watch List” targeted crimes and it’s even common skill in Washington state that Homeland Security personnel are involved in my targeted surveillance and gang stalking crimes. There has even been one out of court settlement in one case in the Seattle area for these criminal activities by Homeland Security Personnel.

My cruise control stopped working on my one hundred forty mile tour back from Spokane WA, on Thursday February 26th (about two weeks ago), and I was gang stalked on the road by numerous vehicles (one of them with a Big Transformer Decal on the Back Window, one with a Big US “Infantry” sticker on his back window, as well as by WA license plate # WEPLAY2) and after they all turned off and I got past Colville, WA, I attempted my cruise control again and it embarked working. I know they have had remote control over my car alarms on my vehicles for a long time now, and it looks to me that they can also remote control my cruise control as well now……

They have been using FOIA DENIALS, FOIA APPEAL DENIALS, GAG ORDERS, NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS AND EVEN – “CLASSIFYING” INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COVER UP THEIR CRIMES AGAINST TARGETED INDIVIDUALS, ACTIVISTS AND JOURNALISTS.

See: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car, Q13 FOX News

See: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car

SEATTLE — A West Seattle man is sharing a surveillance movie that shows the scaring way thieves are using technology to break into cars.

See the movie as a man approaches Tom Dahl’s truck in this driveway. He attempts the treat, but the door is locked. So he takes off his backpack, moves it close to the window. Seconds later, he’s able to get inwards.

Photo Gallery

“He opens the door up,” says Dahl. “The lights went on, it was disarmed.”

Dahl is glad the thief didn’t take his truck. All he did was rummage through the contents of his glove compartment.

“I was brainy enough not to carry anything of value in there. That’s what he was looking for.”

But Dahl is worried about how the thief got in so lightly.

“You used to have a wire that you slipped down the window, when it was mechanical. But now it’s electronic.”

Cases like this are becoming more common across the region.

Lars Carlson says the man who broke into his car in January also appeared to be carrying something in a backpack.

“It’s running through codes automatically or it’s a button they’re pushing or something is happening. But whatever it does, it seems to trick the car into thinking he’s got the legitimate keys.”

Seattle police say they don’t know exactly what kind of device thieves are using, or how it works. But they are worried.

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

Dahl says automakers need to do something to give people a little more security. But until that happens, he’s going to share this movie with as many neighbors as he can.

“I hope other people pay attention, make sure things are secure and locked, and don’t keep things in your car that are of any value.”

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

thirty two comments

Slam1263 (@IKnowBO)

It is just a random code transmitter.

They can transmit a million codes with the shove of a button.

Tow truck driver have been using them for over twenty years.

Don’t the receivers limit the number of failed attempts per 2nd?

Sadly No they don’t

Rodger Wolkins

They need to emit a cloud of pepper drizzle after three failed attempts.

Fresh Stud

Then cars in parking lots would permanently be admitting pepper unload, in a parking lot hundreds of remote keys are used permanently, so it has to be able to see signals without assuming it is failed attempts. They need to increase the complexity of the codes, add more bits, make it too hard to crack.

ashford
lionfan

Can very likely take the entire damn car if it uses keyless ignition, right?

Testicules

For most cars, the thief would still have to deal with the mechanical steering lock that is released by the mechanical portion of the key.

As for some cars that now have keyless thrust button commence features… ?

clovellstc

The car permanently scans for the key. Since this is very likely just a device and sends out a bunch of signals in a row he wouldn’t know which one was for the car, so I doubt it would work on the ignition.

Phillip Coiner

I know how they are doing it. Have the cops send me an e-mail

john Bowler

See a classic Forrest Whitaker film “Ghost Dog”. The hero uses one of those code generators to steal luxury cars.

So, They may steal them from Tow Truck Drivers?

Tester

The device works by “pinging” the FOB on the key chain which, in turn, generates a signal to the vehicle. The device only works when the keys are within operational range of the vehicle.

Frank

This techbology isn’t fresh, over a decade old if anything. They demonstrated this in the movie, ‘Gone in sixty Seconds’.

Device is available on aliexpress from china for $600 or less. Clones key fobs and can transmit them. It’s not a mystery.

Thats not how they work. You need access to the original keys and the car to make a clone.

Most people keep their registration and garage door opener in their car. If a thief sees you leave your vehicle in a parking lot and can access your car this way, he can go to your home and rob it while you’re shopping or standing in the parking lot wondering where your car is.

Dan Darius

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

It’s a shame that cops are always reactive instead of proactive.

Dan Darius
Dee Ouchman

It’s a plain Tesla coil which energised the door lock/unlock servo.

Justa Joe

I don’t need a fresh car that badly. My two thousand five Ford Concentrate has manual (mechanical) doorlocks, manual (forearm crank) windows, and a 5-speed manual transmission. Its also carrying 275,000 miles on the odometer.

I’m in no fear of anyone attempting to steal my wheels.

Marc M

Yes, we have the exact same car – two thousand five Ford Concentrate. Looks like a ruddy ordnance vehicle, but I like it because it has NOTHING (except AC). Manual trans, windows, everything. And a freakin’ metal key. I do not like this fresh crap. “The more the over-think the plumbing, the lighter it is to stop up the drain,” in the words of Scotty. And every excursion to the stealership to fix the over-thought under-engineered geek fucktoys is an exercise on your wallet.

This is accomplish rubbish. The rolling code protocol (keyloq) used by keyless entry will only permit two hundred fifty six code attempts before the original key will need to be reset. This is a hoax.

George Johnson

Evidently the cops are NOT one step ahead of the criminals.

Starheart

There are too many COPS that ARE the CRIMINALS OUT THERE.

pithypaul

The thief is going to sue for invasion of his own privacy, as nobody asked him for permission to use his pic. Hey, this is Amerika.

SMARTERTHANYOU

Wow.. these reporters, especially the police department, are frankly imbeciles! The technology is over a decade old, it’s called a laptop and a receiver.

Starheart

Homeland Security Personnel are using very advanced electronic technology to hack into everything now.

People like Kay Griggs, Michael Hastings, Phillip Marshall, Judi Bari and myself have been targeted by some of these these special ops Homeland Security personnel involved in criminal operations in the US. They have been promoting and rewarding war criminals for years from the CIA and Military Black Sites and Torment Facilities, into Homeland Security, FBI, Law Enforcement, and other government agencies across the country, to target citizens for surveillance and crimes.

(Observe Kay Griggs movies on you tube, as she gives her testimonial for what has been going on for a long time now.)

Since 2011, I’ve been targeted for surveillance burglaries, vandalism, pet torment, vehicle tampering as well as the planting of stolen and unknown origin property and malicious prosecution. My safe deposit box in, Colville, WA ,was even burglarized. I can’t find any organization to help me, out of the dozens and dozens of civil and constitutional rights organizations and attorneys I’ve contacted. I had to get a private investigator to trace license plates and find out who some of the people involved in these targeted black operations are.

I can’t get my FOIA Requests fulfilled for information on my surveillance “Watch List” targeted crimes and it’s even common skill in Washington state that Homeland Security personnel are involved in my targeted surveillance and gang stalking crimes. There has even been one out of court settlement in one case in the Seattle area for these criminal activities by Homeland Security Personnel.

My cruise control stopped working on my one hundred forty mile journey back from Spokane WA, on Thursday February 26th (about two weeks ago), and I was gang stalked on the road by numerous vehicles (one of them with a Big Transformer Decal on the Back Window, one with a Big US “Infantry” sticker on his back window, as well as by WA license plate # WEPLAY2) and after they all turned off and I got past Colville, WA, I attempted my cruise control again and it commenced working. I know they have had remote control over my car alarms on my vehicles for a long time now, and it looks to me that they can also remote control my cruise control as well now……

They have been using FOIA DENIALS, FOIA APPEAL DENIALS, GAG ORDERS, NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS AND EVEN – “CLASSIFYING” INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COVER UP THEIR CRIMES AGAINST TARGETED INDIVIDUALS, ACTIVISTS AND JOURNALISTS.

Observe: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car, Q13 FOX News

Observe: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car

SEATTLE — A West Seattle man is sharing a surveillance movie that shows the panicking way thieves are using technology to break into cars.

Observe the movie as a man approaches Tom Dahl’s truck in this driveway. He attempts the treat, but the door is locked. So he takes off his backpack, moves it close to the window. Seconds later, he’s able to get inwards.

Photo Gallery

“He opens the door up,” says Dahl. “The lights went on, it was disarmed.”

Dahl is glad the thief didn’t take his truck. All he did was rummage through the contents of his glove compartment.

“I was clever enough not to carry anything of value in there. That’s what he was looking for.”

But Dahl is worried about how the thief got in so lightly.

“You used to have a wire that you glided down the window, when it was mechanical. But now it’s electronic.”

Cases like this are becoming more common across the region.

Lars Carlson says the man who broke into his car in January also appeared to be carrying something in a backpack.

“It’s running through codes automatically or it’s a button they’re pushing or something is happening. But whatever it does, it seems to trick the car into thinking he’s got the legitimate keys.”

Seattle police say they don’t know exactly what kind of device thieves are using, or how it works. But they are worried.

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

Dahl says automakers need to do something to give people a little more security. But until that happens, he’s going to share this movie with as many neighbors as he can.

“I hope other people pay attention, make sure things are secure and locked, and don’t keep things in your car that are of any value.”

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

thirty two comments

Slam1263 (@IKnowBO)

It is just a random code transmitter.

They can transmit a million codes with the thrust of a button.

Tow truck driver have been using them for over twenty years.

Don’t the receivers limit the number of failed attempts per 2nd?

Sadly No they don’t

Rodger Wolkins

They need to emit a cloud of pepper sploog after three failed attempts.

Fresh Stud

Then cars in parking lots would permanently be admitting pepper dump, in a parking lot hundreds of remote keys are used permanently, so it has to be able to see signals without assuming it is failed attempts. They need to increase the complexity of the codes, add more bits, make it too hard to crack.

ashford
lionfan

Can very likely take the entire damn car if it uses keyless ignition, right?

Testicules

For most cars, the thief would still have to deal with the mechanical steering lock that is released by the mechanical portion of the key.

As for some cars that now have keyless thrust button begin features… ?

clovellstc

The car permanently scans for the key. Since this is very likely just a device and sends out a bunch of signals in a row he wouldn’t know which one was for the car, so I doubt it would work on the ignition.

Phillip Coiner

I know how they are doing it. Have the cops send me an e-mail

john Bowler

Witness a classic Forrest Whitaker film “Ghost Dog”. The hero uses one of those code generators to steal luxury cars.

So, They may steal them from Tow Truck Drivers?

Tester

The device works by “pinging” the FOB on the key chain which, in turn, generates a signal to the vehicle. The device only works when the keys are within operational range of the vehicle.

Frank

This techbology isn’t fresh, over a decade old if anything. They demonstrated this in the movie, ‘Gone in sixty Seconds’.

Device is available on aliexpress from china for $600 or less. Clones key fobs and can transmit them. It’s not a mystery.

Thats not how they work. You need access to the original keys and the car to make a clone.

Most people keep their registration and garage door opener in their car. If a thief witnesses you leave your vehicle in a parking lot and can access your car this way, he can go to your home and rob it while you’re shopping or standing in the parking lot wondering where your car is.

Dan Darius

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

It’s a shame that cops are always reactive instead of proactive.

Dan Darius
Dee Ouchman

It’s a elementary Tesla coil which energised the door lock/unlock servo.

Justa Joe

I don’t need a fresh car that badly. My two thousand five Ford Concentrate has manual (mechanical) doorlocks, manual (forearm crank) windows, and a 5-speed manual transmission. Its also carrying 275,000 miles on the odometer.

I’m in no fear of anyone attempting to steal my wheels.

Marc M

Yes, we have the exact same car – two thousand five Ford Concentrate. Looks like a ruddy ordnance vehicle, but I like it because it has NOTHING (except AC). Manual trans, windows, everything. And a freakin’ metal key. I do not like this fresh crap. “The more the over-think the plumbing, the lighter it is to stop up the drain,” in the words of Scotty. And every tour to the stealership to fix the over-thought under-engineered geek fucktoys is an exercise on your wallet.

This is finish rubbish. The rolling code protocol (keyloq) used by keyless entry will only permit two hundred fifty six code attempts before the original key will need to be reset. This is a hoax.

George Johnson

Evidently the cops are NOT one step ahead of the criminals.

Starheart

There are too many COPS that ARE the CRIMINALS OUT THERE.

pithypaul

The thief is going to sue for invasion of his own privacy, as nobody asked him for permission to use his photo. Hey, this is Amerika.

SMARTERTHANYOU

Wow.. these reporters, especially the police department, are frankly imbeciles! The technology is over a decade old, it’s called a laptop and a receiver.

Starheart

Homeland Security Personnel are using very advanced electronic technology to hack into everything now.

People like Kay Griggs, Michael Hastings, Phillip Marshall, Judi Bari and myself have been targeted by some of these these special ops Homeland Security personnel involved in criminal operations in the US. They have been promoting and rewarding war criminals for years from the CIA and Military Black Sites and Torment Facilities, into Homeland Security, FBI, Law Enforcement, and other government agencies across the country, to target citizens for surveillance and crimes.

(See Kay Griggs movies on you tube, as she gives her testimonial for what has been going on for a long time now.)

Since 2011, I’ve been targeted for surveillance burglaries, vandalism, pet torment, vehicle tampering as well as the planting of stolen and unknown origin property and malicious prosecution. My safe deposit box in, Colville, WA ,was even burglarized. I can’t find any organization to help me, out of the dozens and dozens of civil and constitutional rights organizations and attorneys I’ve contacted. I had to get a private investigator to trace license plates and find out who some of the people involved in these targeted black operations are.

I can’t get my FOIA Requests fulfilled for information on my surveillance “Watch List” targeted crimes and it’s even common skill in Washington state that Homeland Security personnel are involved in my targeted surveillance and gang stalking crimes. There has even been one out of court settlement in one case in the Seattle area for these criminal activities by Homeland Security Personnel.

My cruise control stopped working on my one hundred forty mile tour back from Spokane WA, on Thursday February 26th (about two weeks ago), and I was gang stalked on the road by numerous vehicles (one of them with a Big Transformer Decal on the Back Window, one with a Big US “Infantry” sticker on his back window, as well as by WA license plate # WEPLAY2) and after they all turned off and I got past Colville, WA, I attempted my cruise control again and it commenced working. I know they have had remote control over my car alarms on my vehicles for a long time now, and it looks to me that they can also remote control my cruise control as well now……

They have been using FOIA DENIALS, FOIA APPEAL DENIALS, GAG ORDERS, NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS AND EVEN – “CLASSIFYING” INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COVER UP THEIR CRIMES AGAINST TARGETED INDIVIDUALS, ACTIVISTS AND JOURNALISTS.

Witness: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car, Q13 FOX News

See: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car

SEATTLE — A West Seattle man is sharing a surveillance movie that shows the panicking way thieves are using technology to break into cars.

See the movie as a man approaches Tom Dahl’s truck in this driveway. He attempts the treat, but the door is locked. So he takes off his backpack, moves it close to the window. Seconds later, he’s able to get inwards.

Photo Gallery

“He opens the door up,” says Dahl. “The lights went on, it was disarmed.”

Dahl is glad the thief didn’t take his truck. All he did was rummage through the contents of his glove compartment.

“I was brainy enough not to carry anything of value in there. That’s what he was looking for.”

But Dahl is worried about how the thief got in so lightly.

“You used to have a wire that you slipped down the window, when it was mechanical. But now it’s electronic.”

Cases like this are becoming more common across the region.

Lars Carlson says the man who broke into his car in January also appeared to be carrying something in a backpack.

“It’s running through codes automatically or it’s a button they’re pushing or something is happening. But whatever it does, it seems to trick the car into thinking he’s got the legitimate keys.”

Seattle police say they don’t know exactly what kind of device thieves are using, or how it works. But they are worried.

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

Dahl says automakers need to do something to give people a little more security. But until that happens, he’s going to share this movie with as many neighbors as he can.

“I hope other people pay attention, make sure things are secure and locked, and don’t keep things in your car that are of any value.”

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

thirty two comments

Slam1263 (@IKnowBO)

It is just a random code transmitter.

They can transmit a million codes with the thrust of a button.

Tow truck driver have been using them for over twenty years.

Don’t the receivers limit the number of failed attempts per 2nd?

Sadly No they don’t

Rodger Wolkins

They need to emit a cloud of pepper splash after three failed attempts.

Fresh Fellow

Then cars in parking lots would permanently be admitting pepper drizzle, in a parking lot hundreds of remote keys are used permanently, so it has to be able to see signals without assuming it is failed attempts. They need to increase the complexity of the codes, add more bits, make it too hard to crack.

ashford
lionfan

Can most likely take the entire damn car if it uses keyless ignition, right?

Testicules

For most cars, the thief would still have to deal with the mechanical steering lock that is released by the mechanical portion of the key.

As for some cars that now have keyless thrust button embark features… ?

clovellstc

The car permanently scans for the key. Since this is very likely just a device and sends out a bunch of signals in a row he wouldn’t know which one was for the car, so I doubt it would work on the ignition.

Phillip Coiner

I know how they are doing it. Have the cops send me an e-mail

john Bowler

Observe a classic Forrest Whitaker film “Ghost Dog”. The hero uses one of those code generators to steal luxury cars.

So, They may steal them from Tow Truck Drivers?

Tester

The device works by “pinging” the FOB on the key chain which, in turn, generates a signal to the vehicle. The device only works when the keys are within operational range of the vehicle.

Frank

This techbology isn’t fresh, over a decade old if anything. They demonstrated this in the movie, ‘Gone in sixty Seconds’.

Device is available on aliexpress from china for $600 or less. Clones key fobs and can transmit them. It’s not a mystery.

Thats not how they work. You need access to the original keys and the car to make a clone.

Most people keep their registration and garage door opener in their car. If a thief sees you leave your vehicle in a parking lot and can access your car this way, he can go to your home and rob it while you’re shopping or standing in the parking lot wondering where your car is.

Dan Darius

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

It’s a shame that cops are always reactive instead of proactive.

Dan Darius
Dee Ouchman

It’s a elementary Tesla coil which energised the door lock/unlock servo.

Justa Joe

I don’t need a fresh car that badly. My two thousand five Ford Concentrate has manual (mechanical) doorlocks, manual (arm crank) windows, and a 5-speed manual transmission. Its also carrying 275,000 miles on the odometer.

I’m in no fear of anyone attempting to steal my wheels.

Marc M

Yes, we have the exact same car – two thousand five Ford Concentrate. Looks like a ruddy ordnance vehicle, but I like it because it has NOTHING (except AC). Manual trans, windows, everything. And a freakin’ metal key. I do not like this fresh crap. “The more the over-think the plumbing, the lighter it is to stop up the drain,” in the words of Scotty. And every excursion to the stealership to fix the over-thought under-engineered geek fucktoys is an exercise on your wallet.

This is accomplish rubbish. The rolling code protocol (keyloq) used by keyless entry will only permit two hundred fifty six code attempts before the original key will need to be reset. This is a hoax.

George Johnson

Evidently the cops are NOT one step ahead of the criminals.

Starheart

There are too many COPS that ARE the CRIMINALS OUT THERE.

pithypaul

The thief is going to sue for invasion of his own privacy, as nobody asked him for permission to use his picture. Hey, this is Amerika.

SMARTERTHANYOU

Wow.. these reporters, especially the police department, are frankly imbeciles! The technology is over a decade old, it’s called a laptop and a receiver.

Starheart

Homeland Security Personnel are using very advanced electronic technology to hack into everything now.

People like Kay Griggs, Michael Hastings, Phillip Marshall, Judi Bari and myself have been targeted by some of these these special ops Homeland Security personnel involved in criminal operations in the US. They have been promoting and rewarding war criminals for years from the CIA and Military Black Sites and Torment Facilities, into Homeland Security, FBI, Law Enforcement, and other government agencies across the country, to target citizens for surveillance and crimes.

(Witness Kay Griggs movies on you tube, as she gives her testimonial for what has been going on for a long time now.)

Since 2011, I’ve been targeted for surveillance burglaries, vandalism, pet torment, vehicle tampering as well as the planting of stolen and unknown origin property and malicious prosecution. My safe deposit box in, Colville, WA ,was even burglarized. I can’t find any organization to help me, out of the dozens and dozens of civil and constitutional rights organizations and attorneys I’ve contacted. I had to get a private investigator to trace license plates and find out who some of the people involved in these targeted black operations are.

I can’t get my FOIA Requests fulfilled for information on my surveillance “Watch List” targeted crimes and it’s even common skill in Washington state that Homeland Security personnel are involved in my targeted surveillance and gang stalking crimes. There has even been one out of court settlement in one case in the Seattle area for these criminal activities by Homeland Security Personnel.

My cruise control stopped working on my one hundred forty mile journey back from Spokane WA, on Thursday February 26th (about two weeks ago), and I was gang stalked on the road by numerous vehicles (one of them with a Big Transformer Decal on the Back Window, one with a Big US “Infantry” sticker on his back window, as well as by WA license plate # WEPLAY2) and after they all turned off and I got past Colville, WA, I attempted my cruise control again and it embarked working. I know they have had remote control over my car alarms on my vehicles for a long time now, and it looks to me that they can also remote control my cruise control as well now……

They have been using FOIA DENIALS, FOIA APPEAL DENIALS, GAG ORDERS, NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS AND EVEN – “CLASSIFYING” INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COVER UP THEIR CRIMES AGAINST TARGETED INDIVIDUALS, ACTIVISTS AND JOURNALISTS.

See: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car, Q13 FOX News

Observe: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car

SEATTLE — A West Seattle man is sharing a surveillance movie that shows the scaring way thieves are using technology to break into cars.

Witness the movie as a man approaches Tom Dahl’s truck in this driveway. He attempts the treat, but the door is locked. So he takes off his backpack, moves it close to the window. Seconds later, he’s able to get inwards.

Photo Gallery

“He opens the door up,” says Dahl. “The lights went on, it was disarmed.”

Dahl is glad the thief didn’t take his truck. All he did was rummage through the contents of his glove compartment.

“I was wise enough not to carry anything of value in there. That’s what he was looking for.”

But Dahl is worried about how the thief got in so lightly.

“You used to have a wire that you slipped down the window, when it was mechanical. But now it’s electronic.”

Cases like this are becoming more common across the region.

Lars Carlson says the man who broke into his car in January also appeared to be carrying something in a backpack.

“It’s running through codes automatically or it’s a button they’re pushing or something is happening. But whatever it does, it seems to trick the car into thinking he’s got the legitimate keys.”

Seattle police say they don’t know exactly what kind of device thieves are using, or how it works. But they are worried.

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

Dahl says automakers need to do something to give people a little more security. But until that happens, he’s going to share this movie with as many neighbors as he can.

“I hope other people pay attention, make sure things are secure and locked, and don’t keep things in your car that are of any value.”

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

thirty two comments

Slam1263 (@IKnowBO)

It is just a random code transmitter.

They can transmit a million codes with the thrust of a button.

Tow truck driver have been using them for over twenty years.

Don’t the receivers limit the number of failed attempts per 2nd?

Sadly No they don’t

Rodger Wolkins

They need to emit a cloud of pepper sploog after three failed attempts.

Fresh Man

Then cars in parking lots would permanently be admitting pepper dump, in a parking lot hundreds of remote keys are used permanently, so it has to be able to see signals without assuming it is failed attempts. They need to increase the complexity of the codes, add more bits, make it too hard to crack.

ashford
lionfan

Can most likely take the entire damn car if it uses keyless ignition, right?

Testicules

For most cars, the thief would still have to deal with the mechanical steering lock that is released by the mechanical portion of the key.

As for some cars that now have keyless thrust button commence features… ?

clovellstc

The car permanently scans for the key. Since this is very likely just a device and sends out a bunch of signals in a row he wouldn’t know which one was for the car, so I doubt it would work on the ignition.

Phillip Coiner

I know how they are doing it. Have the cops send me an e-mail

john Bowler

Observe a classic Forrest Whitaker film “Ghost Dog”. The hero uses one of those code generators to steal luxury cars.

So, They may steal them from Tow Truck Drivers?

Tester

The device works by “pinging” the FOB on the key chain which, in turn, generates a signal to the vehicle. The device only works when the keys are within operational range of the vehicle.

Frank

This techbology isn’t fresh, over a decade old if anything. They demonstrated this in the movie, ‘Gone in sixty Seconds’.

Device is available on aliexpress from china for $600 or less. Clones key fobs and can transmit them. It’s not a mystery.

Thats not how they work. You need access to the original keys and the car to make a clone.

Most people keep their registration and garage door opener in their car. If a thief observes you leave your vehicle in a parking lot and can access your car this way, he can go to your home and rob it while you’re shopping or standing in the parking lot wondering where your car is.

Dan Darius

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

It’s a shame that cops are always reactive instead of proactive.

Dan Darius
Dee Ouchman

It’s a elementary Tesla coil which energised the door lock/unlock servo.

Justa Joe

I don’t need a fresh car that badly. My two thousand five Ford Concentrate has manual (mechanical) doorlocks, manual (arm crank) windows, and a 5-speed manual transmission. Its also carrying 275,000 miles on the odometer.

I’m in no fear of anyone attempting to steal my wheels.

Marc M

Yes, we have the exact same car – two thousand five Ford Concentrate. Looks like a ruddy ordnance vehicle, but I like it because it has NOTHING (except AC). Manual trans, windows, everything. And a freakin’ metal key. I do not like this fresh crap. “The more the over-think the plumbing, the lighter it is to stop up the drain,” in the words of Scotty. And every tour to the stealership to fix the over-thought under-engineered geek fucktoys is an exercise on your wallet.

This is accomplish rubbish. The rolling code protocol (keyloq) used by keyless entry will only permit two hundred fifty six code attempts before the original key will need to be reset. This is a hoax.

George Johnson

Evidently the cops are NOT one step ahead of the criminals.

Starheart

There are too many COPS that ARE the CRIMINALS OUT THERE.

pithypaul

The thief is going to sue for invasion of his own privacy, as nobody asked him for permission to use his picture. Hey, this is Amerika.

SMARTERTHANYOU

Wow.. these reporters, especially the police department, are frankly imbeciles! The technology is over a decade old, it’s called a laptop and a receiver.

Starheart

Homeland Security Personnel are using very advanced electronic technology to hack into everything now.

People like Kay Griggs, Michael Hastings, Phillip Marshall, Judi Bari and myself have been targeted by some of these these special ops Homeland Security personnel involved in criminal operations in the US. They have been promoting and rewarding war criminals for years from the CIA and Military Black Sites and Torment Facilities, into Homeland Security, FBI, Law Enforcement, and other government agencies across the country, to target citizens for surveillance and crimes.

(See Kay Griggs movies on you tube, as she gives her testimonial for what has been going on for a long time now.)

Since 2011, I’ve been targeted for surveillance burglaries, vandalism, pet torment, vehicle tampering as well as the planting of stolen and unknown origin property and malicious prosecution. My safe deposit box in, Colville, WA ,was even burglarized. I can’t find any organization to help me, out of the dozens and dozens of civil and constitutional rights organizations and attorneys I’ve contacted. I had to get a private investigator to trace license plates and find out who some of the people involved in these targeted black operations are.

I can’t get my FOIA Requests fulfilled for information on my surveillance “Watch List” targeted crimes and it’s even common skill in Washington state that Homeland Security personnel are involved in my targeted surveillance and gang stalking crimes. There has even been one out of court settlement in one case in the Seattle area for these criminal activities by Homeland Security Personnel.

My cruise control stopped working on my one hundred forty mile tour back from Spokane WA, on Thursday February 26th (about two weeks ago), and I was gang stalked on the road by numerous vehicles (one of them with a Big Transformer Decal on the Back Window, one with a Big US “Infantry” sticker on his back window, as well as by WA license plate # WEPLAY2) and after they all turned off and I got past Colville, WA, I attempted my cruise control again and it embarked working. I know they have had remote control over my car alarms on my vehicles for a long time now, and it looks to me that they can also remote control my cruise control as well now……

They have been using FOIA DENIALS, FOIA APPEAL DENIALS, GAG ORDERS, NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS AND EVEN – “CLASSIFYING” INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COVER UP THEIR CRIMES AGAINST TARGETED INDIVIDUALS, ACTIVISTS AND JOURNALISTS.

Observe: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car, Q13 FOX News

Witness: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car

SEATTLE — A West Seattle man is sharing a surveillance movie that shows the panicking way thieves are using technology to break into cars.

See the movie as a man approaches Tom Dahl’s truck in this driveway. He attempts the treat, but the door is locked. So he takes off his backpack, moves it close to the window. Seconds later, he’s able to get inwards.

Photo Gallery

“He opens the door up,” says Dahl. “The lights went on, it was disarmed.”

Dahl is glad the thief didn’t take his truck. All he did was rummage through the contents of his glove compartment.

“I was clever enough not to carry anything of value in there. That’s what he was looking for.”

But Dahl is worried about how the thief got in so lightly.

“You used to have a wire that you glided down the window, when it was mechanical. But now it’s electronic.”

Cases like this are becoming more common across the region.

Lars Carlson says the man who broke into his car in January also appeared to be carrying something in a backpack.

“It’s running through codes automatically or it’s a button they’re pushing or something is happening. But whatever it does, it seems to trick the car into thinking he’s got the legitimate keys.”

Seattle police say they don’t know exactly what kind of device thieves are using, or how it works. But they are worried.

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

Dahl says automakers need to do something to give people a little more security. But until that happens, he’s going to share this movie with as many neighbors as he can.

“I hope other people pay attention, make sure things are secure and locked, and don’t keep things in your car that are of any value.”

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

thirty two comments

Slam1263 (@IKnowBO)

It is just a random code transmitter.

They can transmit a million codes with the shove of a button.

Tow truck driver have been using them for over twenty years.

Don’t the receivers limit the number of failed attempts per 2nd?

Sadly No they don’t

Rodger Wolkins

They need to emit a cloud of pepper dump after three failed attempts.

Fresh Boy

Then cars in parking lots would permanently be admitting pepper splatter, in a parking lot hundreds of remote keys are used permanently, so it has to be able to see signals without assuming it is failed attempts. They need to increase the complexity of the codes, add more bits, make it too hard to crack.

ashford
lionfan

Can most likely take the entire damn car if it uses keyless ignition, right?

Testicules

For most cars, the thief would still have to deal with the mechanical steering lock that is released by the mechanical portion of the key.

As for some cars that now have keyless thrust button commence features… ?

clovellstc

The car permanently scans for the key. Since this is very likely just a device and sends out a bunch of signals in a row he wouldn’t know which one was for the car, so I doubt it would work on the ignition.

Phillip Coiner

I know how they are doing it. Have the cops send me an e-mail

john Bowler

Observe a classic Forrest Whitaker film “Ghost Dog”. The hero uses one of those code generators to steal luxury cars.

So, They may steal them from Tow Truck Drivers?

Tester

The device works by “pinging” the FOB on the key chain which, in turn, generates a signal to the vehicle. The device only works when the keys are within operational range of the vehicle.

Frank

This techbology isn’t fresh, over a decade old if anything. They demonstrated this in the movie, ‘Gone in sixty Seconds’.

Device is available on aliexpress from china for $600 or less. Clones key fobs and can transmit them. It’s not a mystery.

Thats not how they work. You need access to the original keys and the car to make a clone.

Most people keep their registration and garage door opener in their car. If a thief sees you leave your vehicle in a parking lot and can access your car this way, he can go to your home and rob it while you’re shopping or standing in the parking lot wondering where your car is.

Dan Darius

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

It’s a shame that cops are always reactive instead of proactive.

Dan Darius
Dee Ouchman

It’s a ordinary Tesla coil which energised the door lock/unlock servo.

Justa Joe

I don’t need a fresh car that badly. My two thousand five Ford Concentrate has manual (mechanical) doorlocks, manual (arm crank) windows, and a 5-speed manual transmission. Its also carrying 275,000 miles on the odometer.

I’m in no fear of anyone attempting to steal my wheels.

Marc M

Yes, we have the exact same car – two thousand five Ford Concentrate. Looks like a ruddy ordnance vehicle, but I like it because it has NOTHING (except AC). Manual trans, windows, everything. And a freakin’ metal key. I do not like this fresh crap. “The more the over-think the plumbing, the lighter it is to stop up the drain,” in the words of Scotty. And every excursion to the stealership to fix the over-thought under-engineered geek fucktoys is an exercise on your wallet.

This is accomplish rubbish. The rolling code protocol (keyloq) used by keyless entry will only permit two hundred fifty six code attempts before the original key will need to be reset. This is a hoax.

George Johnson

Evidently the cops are NOT one step ahead of the criminals.

Starheart

There are too many COPS that ARE the CRIMINALS OUT THERE.

pithypaul

The thief is going to sue for invasion of his own privacy, as nobody asked him for permission to use his photo. Hey, this is Amerika.

SMARTERTHANYOU

Wow.. these reporters, especially the police department, are frankly imbeciles! The technology is over a decade old, it’s called a laptop and a receiver.

Starheart

Homeland Security Personnel are using very advanced electronic technology to hack into everything now.

People like Kay Griggs, Michael Hastings, Phillip Marshall, Judi Bari and myself have been targeted by some of these these special ops Homeland Security personnel involved in criminal operations in the US. They have been promoting and rewarding war criminals for years from the CIA and Military Black Sites and Torment Facilities, into Homeland Security, FBI, Law Enforcement, and other government agencies across the country, to target citizens for surveillance and crimes.

(Witness Kay Griggs movies on you tube, as she gives her testimonial for what has been going on for a long time now.)

Since 2011, I’ve been targeted for surveillance burglaries, vandalism, pet torment, vehicle tampering as well as the planting of stolen and unknown origin property and malicious prosecution. My safe deposit box in, Colville, WA ,was even burglarized. I can’t find any organization to help me, out of the dozens and dozens of civil and constitutional rights organizations and attorneys I’ve contacted. I had to get a private investigator to trace license plates and find out who some of the people involved in these targeted black operations are.

I can’t get my FOIA Requests fulfilled for information on my surveillance “Watch List” targeted crimes and it’s even common skill in Washington state that Homeland Security personnel are involved in my targeted surveillance and gang stalking crimes. There has even been one out of court settlement in one case in the Seattle area for these criminal activities by Homeland Security Personnel.

My cruise control stopped working on my one hundred forty mile tour back from Spokane WA, on Thursday February 26th (about two weeks ago), and I was gang stalked on the road by numerous vehicles (one of them with a Big Transformer Decal on the Back Window, one with a Big US “Infantry” sticker on his back window, as well as by WA license plate # WEPLAY2) and after they all turned off and I got past Colville, WA, I attempted my cruise control again and it embarked working. I know they have had remote control over my car alarms on my vehicles for a long time now, and it looks to me that they can also remote control my cruise control as well now……

They have been using FOIA DENIALS, FOIA APPEAL DENIALS, GAG ORDERS, NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS AND EVEN – “CLASSIFYING” INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COVER UP THEIR CRIMES AGAINST TARGETED INDIVIDUALS, ACTIVISTS AND JOURNALISTS.

See: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car, Q13 FOX News

See: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car

SEATTLE — A West Seattle man is sharing a surveillance movie that shows the panicking way thieves are using technology to break into cars.

Observe the movie as a man approaches Tom Dahl’s truck in this driveway. He attempts the treat, but the door is locked. So he takes off his backpack, moves it close to the window. Seconds later, he’s able to get inwards.

Photo Gallery

“He opens the door up,” says Dahl. “The lights went on, it was disarmed.”

Dahl is glad the thief didn’t take his truck. All he did was rummage through the contents of his glove compartment.

“I was brainy enough not to carry anything of value in there. That’s what he was looking for.”

But Dahl is worried about how the thief got in so lightly.

“You used to have a wire that you glided down the window, when it was mechanical. But now it’s electronic.”

Cases like this are becoming more common across the region.

Lars Carlson says the man who broke into his car in January also appeared to be carrying something in a backpack.

“It’s running through codes automatically or it’s a button they’re pushing or something is happening. But whatever it does, it seems to trick the car into thinking he’s got the legitimate keys.”

Seattle police say they don’t know exactly what kind of device thieves are using, or how it works. But they are worried.

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

Dahl says automakers need to do something to give people a little more security. But until that happens, he’s going to share this movie with as many neighbors as he can.

“I hope other people pay attention, make sure things are secure and locked, and don’t keep things in your car that are of any value.”

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

thirty two comments

Slam1263 (@IKnowBO)

It is just a random code transmitter.

They can transmit a million codes with the shove of a button.

Tow truck driver have been using them for over twenty years.

Don’t the receivers limit the number of failed attempts per 2nd?

Sadly No they don’t

Rodger Wolkins

They need to emit a cloud of pepper dump after three failed attempts.

Fresh Stud

Then cars in parking lots would permanently be admitting pepper dump, in a parking lot hundreds of remote keys are used permanently, so it has to be able to see signals without assuming it is failed attempts. They need to increase the complexity of the codes, add more bits, make it too hard to crack.

ashford
lionfan

Can most likely take the entire damn car if it uses keyless ignition, right?

Testicules

For most cars, the thief would still have to deal with the mechanical steering lock that is released by the mechanical portion of the key.

As for some cars that now have keyless thrust button embark features… ?

clovellstc

The car permanently scans for the key. Since this is very likely just a device and sends out a bunch of signals in a row he wouldn’t know which one was for the car, so I doubt it would work on the ignition.

Phillip Coiner

I know how they are doing it. Have the cops send me an e-mail

john Bowler

Witness a classic Forrest Whitaker film “Ghost Dog”. The hero uses one of those code generators to steal luxury cars.

So, They may steal them from Tow Truck Drivers?

Tester

The device works by “pinging” the FOB on the key chain which, in turn, generates a signal to the vehicle. The device only works when the keys are within operational range of the vehicle.

Frank

This techbology isn’t fresh, over a decade old if anything. They demonstrated this in the movie, ‘Gone in sixty Seconds’.

Device is available on aliexpress from china for $600 or less. Clones key fobs and can transmit them. It’s not a mystery.

Thats not how they work. You need access to the original keys and the car to make a clone.

Most people keep their registration and garage door opener in their car. If a thief observes you leave your vehicle in a parking lot and can access your car this way, he can go to your home and rob it while you’re shopping or standing in the parking lot wondering where your car is.

Dan Darius

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

It’s a shame that cops are always reactive instead of proactive.

Dan Darius
Dee Ouchman

It’s a ordinary Tesla coil which energised the door lock/unlock servo.

Justa Joe

I don’t need a fresh car that badly. My two thousand five Ford Concentrate has manual (mechanical) doorlocks, manual (palm crank) windows, and a 5-speed manual transmission. Its also carrying 275,000 miles on the odometer.

I’m in no fear of anyone attempting to steal my wheels.

Marc M

Yes, we have the exact same car – two thousand five Ford Concentrate. Looks like a ruddy ordnance vehicle, but I like it because it has NOTHING (except AC). Manual trans, windows, everything. And a freakin’ metal key. I do not like this fresh crap. “The more the over-think the plumbing, the lighter it is to stop up the drain,” in the words of Scotty. And every journey to the stealership to fix the over-thought under-engineered geek fucktoys is an exercise on your wallet.

This is accomplish rubbish. The rolling code protocol (keyloq) used by keyless entry will only permit two hundred fifty six code attempts before the original key will need to be reset. This is a hoax.

George Johnson

Evidently the cops are NOT one step ahead of the criminals.

Starheart

There are too many COPS that ARE the CRIMINALS OUT THERE.

pithypaul

The thief is going to sue for invasion of his own privacy, as nobody asked him for permission to use his picture. Hey, this is Amerika.

SMARTERTHANYOU

Wow.. these reporters, especially the police department, are frankly imbeciles! The technology is over a decade old, it’s called a laptop and a receiver.

Starheart

Homeland Security Personnel are using very advanced electronic technology to hack into everything now.

People like Kay Griggs, Michael Hastings, Phillip Marshall, Judi Bari and myself have been targeted by some of these these special ops Homeland Security personnel involved in criminal operations in the US. They have been promoting and rewarding war criminals for years from the CIA and Military Black Sites and Torment Facilities, into Homeland Security, FBI, Law Enforcement, and other government agencies across the country, to target citizens for surveillance and crimes.

(Observe Kay Griggs movies on you tube, as she gives her testimonial for what has been going on for a long time now.)

Since 2011, I’ve been targeted for surveillance burglaries, vandalism, pet torment, vehicle tampering as well as the planting of stolen and unknown origin property and malicious prosecution. My safe deposit box in, Colville, WA ,was even burglarized. I can’t find any organization to help me, out of the dozens and dozens of civil and constitutional rights organizations and attorneys I’ve contacted. I had to get a private investigator to trace license plates and find out who some of the people involved in these targeted black operations are.

I can’t get my FOIA Requests fulfilled for information on my surveillance “Watch List” targeted crimes and it’s even common skill in Washington state that Homeland Security personnel are involved in my targeted surveillance and gang stalking crimes. There has even been one out of court settlement in one case in the Seattle area for these criminal activities by Homeland Security Personnel.

My cruise control stopped working on my one hundred forty mile journey back from Spokane WA, on Thursday February 26th (about two weeks ago), and I was gang stalked on the road by numerous vehicles (one of them with a Big Transformer Decal on the Back Window, one with a Big US “Infantry” sticker on his back window, as well as by WA license plate # WEPLAY2) and after they all turned off and I got past Colville, WA, I attempted my cruise control again and it embarked working. I know they have had remote control over my car alarms on my vehicles for a long time now, and it looks to me that they can also remote control my cruise control as well now……

They have been using FOIA DENIALS, FOIA APPEAL DENIALS, GAG ORDERS, NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS AND EVEN – “CLASSIFYING” INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COVER UP THEIR CRIMES AGAINST TARGETED INDIVIDUALS, ACTIVISTS AND JOURNALISTS.

Witness: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car, Q13 FOX News

Observe: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car

SEATTLE — A West Seattle man is sharing a surveillance movie that shows the scaring way thieves are using technology to break into cars.

Observe the movie as a man approaches Tom Dahl’s truck in this driveway. He attempts the treat, but the door is locked. So he takes off his backpack, moves it close to the window. Seconds later, he’s able to get inwards.

Photo Gallery

“He opens the door up,” says Dahl. “The lights went on, it was disarmed.”

Dahl is glad the thief didn’t take his truck. All he did was rummage through the contents of his glove compartment.

“I was wise enough not to carry anything of value in there. That’s what he was looking for.”

But Dahl is worried about how the thief got in so lightly.

“You used to have a wire that you glided down the window, when it was mechanical. But now it’s electronic.”

Cases like this are becoming more common across the region.

Lars Carlson says the man who broke into his car in January also appeared to be carrying something in a backpack.

“It’s running through codes automatically or it’s a button they’re pushing or something is happening. But whatever it does, it seems to trick the car into thinking he’s got the legitimate keys.”

Seattle police say they don’t know exactly what kind of device thieves are using, or how it works. But they are worried.

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

Dahl says automakers need to do something to give people a little more security. But until that happens, he’s going to share this movie with as many neighbors as he can.

“I hope other people pay attention, make sure things are secure and locked, and don’t keep things in your car that are of any value.”

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

thirty two comments

Slam1263 (@IKnowBO)

It is just a random code transmitter.

They can transmit a million codes with the shove of a button.

Tow truck driver have been using them for over twenty years.

Don’t the receivers limit the number of failed attempts per 2nd?

Sadly No they don’t

Rodger Wolkins

They need to emit a cloud of pepper squirt after three failed attempts.

Fresh Dude

Then cars in parking lots would permanently be admitting pepper splash, in a parking lot hundreds of remote keys are used permanently, so it has to be able to see signals without assuming it is failed attempts. They need to increase the complexity of the codes, add more bits, make it too hard to crack.

ashford
lionfan

Can very likely take the entire damn car if it uses keyless ignition, right?

Testicules

For most cars, the thief would still have to deal with the mechanical steering lock that is released by the mechanical portion of the key.

As for some cars that now have keyless shove button embark features… ?

clovellstc

The car permanently scans for the key. Since this is most likely just a device and sends out a bunch of signals in a row he wouldn’t know which one was for the car, so I doubt it would work on the ignition.

Phillip Coiner

I know how they are doing it. Have the cops send me an e-mail

john Bowler

Witness a classic Forrest Whitaker film “Ghost Dog”. The hero uses one of those code generators to steal luxury cars.

So, They may steal them from Tow Truck Drivers?

Tester

The device works by “pinging” the FOB on the key chain which, in turn, generates a signal to the vehicle. The device only works when the keys are within operational range of the vehicle.

Frank

This techbology isn’t fresh, over a decade old if anything. They demonstrated this in the movie, ‘Gone in sixty Seconds’.

Device is available on aliexpress from china for $600 or less. Clones key fobs and can transmit them. It’s not a mystery.

Thats not how they work. You need access to the original keys and the car to make a clone.

Most people keep their registration and garage door opener in their car. If a thief sees you leave your vehicle in a parking lot and can access your car this way, he can go to your home and rob it while you’re shopping or standing in the parking lot wondering where your car is.

Dan Darius

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

It’s a shame that cops are always reactive instead of proactive.

Dan Darius
Dee Ouchman

It’s a plain Tesla coil which energised the door lock/unlock servo.

Justa Joe

I don’t need a fresh car that badly. My two thousand five Ford Concentrate has manual (mechanical) doorlocks, manual (forearm crank) windows, and a 5-speed manual transmission. Its also carrying 275,000 miles on the odometer.

I’m in no fear of anyone attempting to steal my wheels.

Marc M

Yes, we have the exact same car – two thousand five Ford Concentrate. Looks like a ruddy ordnance vehicle, but I like it because it has NOTHING (except AC). Manual trans, windows, everything. And a freakin’ metal key. I do not like this fresh crap. “The more the over-think the plumbing, the lighter it is to stop up the drain,” in the words of Scotty. And every tour to the stealership to fix the over-thought under-engineered geek fucktoys is an exercise on your wallet.

This is accomplish rubbish. The rolling code protocol (keyloq) used by keyless entry will only permit two hundred fifty six code attempts before the original key will need to be reset. This is a hoax.

George Johnson

Evidently the cops are NOT one step ahead of the criminals.

Starheart

There are too many COPS that ARE the CRIMINALS OUT THERE.

pithypaul

The thief is going to sue for invasion of his own privacy, as nobody asked him for permission to use his pic. Hey, this is Amerika.

SMARTERTHANYOU

Wow.. these reporters, especially the police department, are frankly imbeciles! The technology is over a decade old, it’s called a laptop and a receiver.

Starheart

Homeland Security Personnel are using very advanced electronic technology to hack into everything now.

People like Kay Griggs, Michael Hastings, Phillip Marshall, Judi Bari and myself have been targeted by some of these these special ops Homeland Security personnel involved in criminal operations in the US. They have been promoting and rewarding war criminals for years from the CIA and Military Black Sites and Torment Facilities, into Homeland Security, FBI, Law Enforcement, and other government agencies across the country, to target citizens for surveillance and crimes.

(See Kay Griggs movies on you tube, as she gives her testimonial for what has been going on for a long time now.)

Since 2011, I’ve been targeted for surveillance burglaries, vandalism, pet torment, vehicle tampering as well as the planting of stolen and unknown origin property and malicious prosecution. My safe deposit box in, Colville, WA ,was even burglarized. I can’t find any organization to help me, out of the dozens and dozens of civil and constitutional rights organizations and attorneys I’ve contacted. I had to get a private investigator to trace license plates and find out who some of the people involved in these targeted black operations are.

I can’t get my FOIA Requests fulfilled for information on my surveillance “Watch List” targeted crimes and it’s even common skill in Washington state that Homeland Security personnel are involved in my targeted surveillance and gang stalking crimes. There has even been one out of court settlement in one case in the Seattle area for these criminal activities by Homeland Security Personnel.

My cruise control stopped working on my one hundred forty mile excursion back from Spokane WA, on Thursday February 26th (about two weeks ago), and I was gang stalked on the road by numerous vehicles (one of them with a Big Transformer Decal on the Back Window, one with a Big US “Infantry” sticker on his back window, as well as by WA license plate # WEPLAY2) and after they all turned off and I got past Colville, WA, I attempted my cruise control again and it embarked working. I know they have had remote control over my car alarms on my vehicles for a long time now, and it looks to me that they can also remote control my cruise control as well now……

They have been using FOIA DENIALS, FOIA APPEAL DENIALS, GAG ORDERS, NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS AND EVEN – “CLASSIFYING” INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COVER UP THEIR CRIMES AGAINST TARGETED INDIVIDUALS, ACTIVISTS AND JOURNALISTS.

See: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car, Q13 FOX News

See: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car

SEATTLE — A West Seattle man is sharing a surveillance movie that shows the scaring way thieves are using technology to break into cars.

Observe the movie as a man approaches Tom Dahl’s truck in this driveway. He attempts the treat, but the door is locked. So he takes off his backpack, moves it close to the window. Seconds later, he’s able to get inwards.

Photo Gallery

“He opens the door up,” says Dahl. “The lights went on, it was disarmed.”

Dahl is glad the thief didn’t take his truck. All he did was rummage through the contents of his glove compartment.

“I was clever enough not to carry anything of value in there. That’s what he was looking for.”

But Dahl is worried about how the thief got in so lightly.

“You used to have a wire that you glided down the window, when it was mechanical. But now it’s electronic.”

Cases like this are becoming more common across the region.

Lars Carlson says the man who broke into his car in January also appeared to be carrying something in a backpack.

“It’s running through codes automatically or it’s a button they’re pushing or something is happening. But whatever it does, it seems to trick the car into thinking he’s got the legitimate keys.”

Seattle police say they don’t know exactly what kind of device thieves are using, or how it works. But they are worried.

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

Dahl says automakers need to do something to give people a little more security. But until that happens, he’s going to share this movie with as many neighbors as he can.

“I hope other people pay attention, make sure things are secure and locked, and don’t keep things in your car that are of any value.”

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

thirty two comments

Slam1263 (@IKnowBO)

It is just a random code transmitter.

They can transmit a million codes with the shove of a button.

Tow truck driver have been using them for over twenty years.

Don’t the receivers limit the number of failed attempts per 2nd?

Sadly No they don’t

Rodger Wolkins

They need to emit a cloud of pepper sploog after three failed attempts.

Fresh Man

Then cars in parking lots would permanently be admitting pepper splatter, in a parking lot hundreds of remote keys are used permanently, so it has to be able to see signals without assuming it is failed attempts. They need to increase the complexity of the codes, add more bits, make it too hard to crack.

ashford
lionfan

Can very likely take the entire damn car if it uses keyless ignition, right?

Testicules

For most cars, the thief would still have to deal with the mechanical steering lock that is released by the mechanical portion of the key.

As for some cars that now have keyless thrust button commence features… ?

clovellstc

The car permanently scans for the key. Since this is very likely just a device and sends out a bunch of signals in a row he wouldn’t know which one was for the car, so I doubt it would work on the ignition.

Phillip Coiner

I know how they are doing it. Have the cops send me an e-mail

john Bowler

Witness a classic Forrest Whitaker film “Ghost Dog”. The hero uses one of those code generators to steal luxury cars.

So, They may steal them from Tow Truck Drivers?

Tester

The device works by “pinging” the FOB on the key chain which, in turn, generates a signal to the vehicle. The device only works when the keys are within operational range of the vehicle.

Frank

This techbology isn’t fresh, over a decade old if anything. They demonstrated this in the movie, ‘Gone in sixty Seconds’.

Device is available on aliexpress from china for $600 or less. Clones key fobs and can transmit them. It’s not a mystery.

Thats not how they work. You need access to the original keys and the car to make a clone.

Most people keep their registration and garage door opener in their car. If a thief witnesses you leave your vehicle in a parking lot and can access your car this way, he can go to your home and rob it while you’re shopping or standing in the parking lot wondering where your car is.

Dan Darius

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

It’s a shame that cops are always reactive instead of proactive.

Dan Darius
Dee Ouchman

It’s a elementary Tesla coil which energised the door lock/unlock servo.

Justa Joe

I don’t need a fresh car that badly. My two thousand five Ford Concentrate has manual (mechanical) doorlocks, manual (mitt crank) windows, and a 5-speed manual transmission. Its also carrying 275,000 miles on the odometer.

I’m in no fear of anyone attempting to steal my wheels.

Marc M

Yes, we have the exact same car – two thousand five Ford Concentrate. Looks like a ruddy ordnance vehicle, but I like it because it has NOTHING (except AC). Manual trans, windows, everything. And a freakin’ metal key. I do not like this fresh crap. “The more the over-think the plumbing, the lighter it is to stop up the drain,” in the words of Scotty. And every tour to the stealership to fix the over-thought under-engineered geek fucktoys is an exercise on your wallet.

This is finish rubbish. The rolling code protocol (keyloq) used by keyless entry will only permit two hundred fifty six code attempts before the original key will need to be reset. This is a hoax.

George Johnson

Evidently the cops are NOT one step ahead of the criminals.

Starheart

There are too many COPS that ARE the CRIMINALS OUT THERE.

pithypaul

The thief is going to sue for invasion of his own privacy, as nobody asked him for permission to use his pic. Hey, this is Amerika.

SMARTERTHANYOU

Wow.. these reporters, especially the police department, are frankly imbeciles! The technology is over a decade old, it’s called a laptop and a receiver.

Starheart

Homeland Security Personnel are using very advanced electronic technology to hack into everything now.

People like Kay Griggs, Michael Hastings, Phillip Marshall, Judi Bari and myself have been targeted by some of these these special ops Homeland Security personnel involved in criminal operations in the US. They have been promoting and rewarding war criminals for years from the CIA and Military Black Sites and Torment Facilities, into Homeland Security, FBI, Law Enforcement, and other government agencies across the country, to target citizens for surveillance and crimes.

(Witness Kay Griggs movies on you tube, as she gives her testimonial for what has been going on for a long time now.)

Since 2011, I’ve been targeted for surveillance burglaries, vandalism, pet torment, vehicle tampering as well as the planting of stolen and unknown origin property and malicious prosecution. My safe deposit box in, Colville, WA ,was even burglarized. I can’t find any organization to help me, out of the dozens and dozens of civil and constitutional rights organizations and attorneys I’ve contacted. I had to get a private investigator to trace license plates and find out who some of the people involved in these targeted black operations are.

I can’t get my FOIA Requests fulfilled for information on my surveillance “Watch List” targeted crimes and it’s even common skill in Washington state that Homeland Security personnel are involved in my targeted surveillance and gang stalking crimes. There has even been one out of court settlement in one case in the Seattle area for these criminal activities by Homeland Security Personnel.

My cruise control stopped working on my one hundred forty mile tour back from Spokane WA, on Thursday February 26th (about two weeks ago), and I was gang stalked on the road by numerous vehicles (one of them with a Big Transformer Decal on the Back Window, one with a Big US “Infantry” sticker on his back window, as well as by WA license plate # WEPLAY2) and after they all turned off and I got past Colville, WA, I attempted my cruise control again and it commenced working. I know they have had remote control over my car alarms on my vehicles for a long time now, and it looks to me that they can also remote control my cruise control as well now……

They have been using FOIA DENIALS, FOIA APPEAL DENIALS, GAG ORDERS, NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS AND EVEN – “CLASSIFYING” INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COVER UP THEIR CRIMES AGAINST TARGETED INDIVIDUALS, ACTIVISTS AND JOURNALISTS.

Observe: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car, Q13 FOX News

Observe: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car

SEATTLE — A West Seattle man is sharing a surveillance movie that shows the scaring way thieves are using technology to break into cars.

Witness the movie as a man approaches Tom Dahl’s truck in this driveway. He attempts the treat, but the door is locked. So he takes off his backpack, moves it close to the window. Seconds later, he’s able to get inwards.

Photo Gallery

“He opens the door up,” says Dahl. “The lights went on, it was disarmed.”

Dahl is glad the thief didn’t take his truck. All he did was rummage through the contents of his glove compartment.

“I was clever enough not to carry anything of value in there. That’s what he was looking for.”

But Dahl is worried about how the thief got in so lightly.

“You used to have a wire that you glided down the window, when it was mechanical. But now it’s electronic.”

Cases like this are becoming more common across the region.

Lars Carlson says the man who broke into his car in January also appeared to be carrying something in a backpack.

“It’s running through codes automatically or it’s a button they’re pushing or something is happening. But whatever it does, it seems to trick the car into thinking he’s got the legitimate keys.”

Seattle police say they don’t know exactly what kind of device thieves are using, or how it works. But they are worried.

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

Dahl says automakers need to do something to give people a little more security. But until that happens, he’s going to share this movie with as many neighbors as he can.

“I hope other people pay attention, make sure things are secure and locked, and don’t keep things in your car that are of any value.”

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

thirty two comments

Slam1263 (@IKnowBO)

It is just a random code transmitter.

They can transmit a million codes with the thrust of a button.

Tow truck driver have been using them for over twenty years.

Don’t the receivers limit the number of failed attempts per 2nd?

Sadly No they don’t

Rodger Wolkins

They need to emit a cloud of pepper bust after three failed attempts.

Fresh Man

Then cars in parking lots would permanently be admitting pepper splash, in a parking lot hundreds of remote keys are used permanently, so it has to be able to see signals without assuming it is failed attempts. They need to increase the complexity of the codes, add more bits, make it too hard to crack.

ashford
lionfan

Can most likely take the entire damn car if it uses keyless ignition, right?

Testicules

For most cars, the thief would still have to deal with the mechanical steering lock that is released by the mechanical portion of the key.

As for some cars that now have keyless thrust button commence features… ?

clovellstc

The car permanently scans for the key. Since this is very likely just a device and sends out a bunch of signals in a row he wouldn’t know which one was for the car, so I doubt it would work on the ignition.

Phillip Coiner

I know how they are doing it. Have the cops send me an e-mail

john Bowler

See a classic Forrest Whitaker film “Ghost Dog”. The hero uses one of those code generators to steal luxury cars.

So, They may steal them from Tow Truck Drivers?

Tester

The device works by “pinging” the FOB on the key chain which, in turn, generates a signal to the vehicle. The device only works when the keys are within operational range of the vehicle.

Frank

This techbology isn’t fresh, over a decade old if anything. They demonstrated this in the movie, ‘Gone in sixty Seconds’.

Device is available on aliexpress from china for $600 or less. Clones key fobs and can transmit them. It’s not a mystery.

Thats not how they work. You need access to the original keys and the car to make a clone.

Most people keep their registration and garage door opener in their car. If a thief witnesses you leave your vehicle in a parking lot and can access your car this way, he can go to your home and rob it while you’re shopping or standing in the parking lot wondering where your car is.

Dan Darius

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

It’s a shame that cops are always reactive instead of proactive.

Dan Darius
Dee Ouchman

It’s a ordinary Tesla coil which energised the door lock/unlock servo.

Justa Joe

I don’t need a fresh car that badly. My two thousand five Ford Concentrate has manual (mechanical) doorlocks, manual (palm crank) windows, and a 5-speed manual transmission. Its also carrying 275,000 miles on the odometer.

I’m in no fear of anyone attempting to steal my wheels.

Marc M

Yes, we have the exact same car – two thousand five Ford Concentrate. Looks like a ruddy ordnance vehicle, but I like it because it has NOTHING (except AC). Manual trans, windows, everything. And a freakin’ metal key. I do not like this fresh crap. “The more the over-think the plumbing, the lighter it is to stop up the drain,” in the words of Scotty. And every journey to the stealership to fix the over-thought under-engineered geek fucktoys is an exercise on your wallet.

This is accomplish rubbish. The rolling code protocol (keyloq) used by keyless entry will only permit two hundred fifty six code attempts before the original key will need to be reset. This is a hoax.

George Johnson

Evidently the cops are NOT one step ahead of the criminals.

Starheart

There are too many COPS that ARE the CRIMINALS OUT THERE.

pithypaul

The thief is going to sue for invasion of his own privacy, as nobody asked him for permission to use his pic. Hey, this is Amerika.

SMARTERTHANYOU

Wow.. these reporters, especially the police department, are frankly imbeciles! The technology is over a decade old, it’s called a laptop and a receiver.

Starheart

Homeland Security Personnel are using very advanced electronic technology to hack into everything now.

People like Kay Griggs, Michael Hastings, Phillip Marshall, Judi Bari and myself have been targeted by some of these these special ops Homeland Security personnel involved in criminal operations in the US. They have been promoting and rewarding war criminals for years from the CIA and Military Black Sites and Torment Facilities, into Homeland Security, FBI, Law Enforcement, and other government agencies across the country, to target citizens for surveillance and crimes.

(Observe Kay Griggs movies on you tube, as she gives her testimonial for what has been going on for a long time now.)

Since 2011, I’ve been targeted for surveillance burglaries, vandalism, pet torment, vehicle tampering as well as the planting of stolen and unknown origin property and malicious prosecution. My safe deposit box in, Colville, WA ,was even burglarized. I can’t find any organization to help me, out of the dozens and dozens of civil and constitutional rights organizations and attorneys I’ve contacted. I had to get a private investigator to trace license plates and find out who some of the people involved in these targeted black operations are.

I can’t get my FOIA Requests fulfilled for information on my surveillance “Watch List” targeted crimes and it’s even common skill in Washington state that Homeland Security personnel are involved in my targeted surveillance and gang stalking crimes. There has even been one out of court settlement in one case in the Seattle area for these criminal activities by Homeland Security Personnel.

My cruise control stopped working on my one hundred forty mile excursion back from Spokane WA, on Thursday February 26th (about two weeks ago), and I was gang stalked on the road by numerous vehicles (one of them with a Big Transformer Decal on the Back Window, one with a Big US “Infantry” sticker on his back window, as well as by WA license plate # WEPLAY2) and after they all turned off and I got past Colville, WA, I attempted my cruise control again and it embarked working. I know they have had remote control over my car alarms on my vehicles for a long time now, and it looks to me that they can also remote control my cruise control as well now……

They have been using FOIA DENIALS, FOIA APPEAL DENIALS, GAG ORDERS, NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS AND EVEN – “CLASSIFYING” INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COVER UP THEIR CRIMES AGAINST TARGETED INDIVIDUALS, ACTIVISTS AND JOURNALISTS.

See: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car, Q13 FOX News

Observe: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car

SEATTLE — A West Seattle man is sharing a surveillance movie that shows the scaring way thieves are using technology to break into cars.

See the movie as a man approaches Tom Dahl’s truck in this driveway. He attempts the treat, but the door is locked. So he takes off his backpack, moves it close to the window. Seconds later, he’s able to get inwards.

Photo Gallery

“He opens the door up,” says Dahl. “The lights went on, it was disarmed.”

Dahl is glad the thief didn’t take his truck. All he did was rummage through the contents of his glove compartment.

“I was clever enough not to carry anything of value in there. That’s what he was looking for.”

But Dahl is worried about how the thief got in so lightly.

“You used to have a wire that you glided down the window, when it was mechanical. But now it’s electronic.”

Cases like this are becoming more common across the region.

Lars Carlson says the man who broke into his car in January also appeared to be carrying something in a backpack.

“It’s running through codes automatically or it’s a button they’re pushing or something is happening. But whatever it does, it seems to trick the car into thinking he’s got the legitimate keys.”

Seattle police say they don’t know exactly what kind of device thieves are using, or how it works. But they are worried.

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

Dahl says automakers need to do something to give people a little more security. But until that happens, he’s going to share this movie with as many neighbors as he can.

“I hope other people pay attention, make sure things are secure and locked, and don’t keep things in your car that are of any value.”

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

thirty two comments

Slam1263 (@IKnowBO)

It is just a random code transmitter.

They can transmit a million codes with the thrust of a button.

Tow truck driver have been using them for over twenty years.

Don’t the receivers limit the number of failed attempts per 2nd?

Sadly No they don’t

Rodger Wolkins

They need to emit a cloud of pepper dump after three failed attempts.

Fresh Man

Then cars in parking lots would permanently be admitting pepper splash, in a parking lot hundreds of remote keys are used permanently, so it has to be able to see signals without assuming it is failed attempts. They need to increase the complexity of the codes, add more bits, make it too hard to crack.

ashford
lionfan

Can most likely take the entire damn car if it uses keyless ignition, right?

Testicules

For most cars, the thief would still have to deal with the mechanical steering lock that is released by the mechanical portion of the key.

As for some cars that now have keyless thrust button embark features… ?

clovellstc

The car permanently scans for the key. Since this is most likely just a device and sends out a bunch of signals in a row he wouldn’t know which one was for the car, so I doubt it would work on the ignition.

Phillip Coiner

I know how they are doing it. Have the cops send me an e-mail

john Bowler

Witness a classic Forrest Whitaker film “Ghost Dog”. The hero uses one of those code generators to steal luxury cars.

So, They may steal them from Tow Truck Drivers?

Tester

The device works by “pinging” the FOB on the key chain which, in turn, generates a signal to the vehicle. The device only works when the keys are within operational range of the vehicle.

Frank

This techbology isn’t fresh, over a decade old if anything. They demonstrated this in the movie, ‘Gone in sixty Seconds’.

Device is available on aliexpress from china for $600 or less. Clones key fobs and can transmit them. It’s not a mystery.

Thats not how they work. You need access to the original keys and the car to make a clone.

Most people keep their registration and garage door opener in their car. If a thief sees you leave your vehicle in a parking lot and can access your car this way, he can go to your home and rob it while you’re shopping or standing in the parking lot wondering where your car is.

Dan Darius

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

It’s a shame that cops are always reactive instead of proactive.

Dan Darius
Dee Ouchman

It’s a elementary Tesla coil which energised the door lock/unlock servo.

Justa Joe

I don’t need a fresh car that badly. My two thousand five Ford Concentrate has manual (mechanical) doorlocks, manual (forearm crank) windows, and a 5-speed manual transmission. Its also carrying 275,000 miles on the odometer.

I’m in no fear of anyone attempting to steal my wheels.

Marc M

Yes, we have the exact same car – two thousand five Ford Concentrate. Looks like a ruddy ordnance vehicle, but I like it because it has NOTHING (except AC). Manual trans, windows, everything. And a freakin’ metal key. I do not like this fresh crap. “The more the over-think the plumbing, the lighter it is to stop up the drain,” in the words of Scotty. And every journey to the stealership to fix the over-thought under-engineered geek fucktoys is an exercise on your wallet.

This is accomplish rubbish. The rolling code protocol (keyloq) used by keyless entry will only permit two hundred fifty six code attempts before the original key will need to be reset. This is a hoax.

George Johnson

Evidently the cops are NOT one step ahead of the criminals.

Starheart

There are too many COPS that ARE the CRIMINALS OUT THERE.

pithypaul

The thief is going to sue for invasion of his own privacy, as nobody asked him for permission to use his picture. Hey, this is Amerika.

SMARTERTHANYOU

Wow.. these reporters, especially the police department, are frankly imbeciles! The technology is over a decade old, it’s called a laptop and a receiver.

Starheart

Homeland Security Personnel are using very advanced electronic technology to hack into everything now.

People like Kay Griggs, Michael Hastings, Phillip Marshall, Judi Bari and myself have been targeted by some of these these special ops Homeland Security personnel involved in criminal operations in the US. They have been promoting and rewarding war criminals for years from the CIA and Military Black Sites and Torment Facilities, into Homeland Security, FBI, Law Enforcement, and other government agencies across the country, to target citizens for surveillance and crimes.

(See Kay Griggs movies on you tube, as she gives her testimonial for what has been going on for a long time now.)

Since 2011, I’ve been targeted for surveillance burglaries, vandalism, pet torment, vehicle tampering as well as the planting of stolen and unknown origin property and malicious prosecution. My safe deposit box in, Colville, WA ,was even burglarized. I can’t find any organization to help me, out of the dozens and dozens of civil and constitutional rights organizations and attorneys I’ve contacted. I had to get a private investigator to trace license plates and find out who some of the people involved in these targeted black operations are.

I can’t get my FOIA Requests fulfilled for information on my surveillance “Watch List” targeted crimes and it’s even common skill in Washington state that Homeland Security personnel are involved in my targeted surveillance and gang stalking crimes. There has even been one out of court settlement in one case in the Seattle area for these criminal activities by Homeland Security Personnel.

My cruise control stopped working on my one hundred forty mile journey back from Spokane WA, on Thursday February 26th (about two weeks ago), and I was gang stalked on the road by numerous vehicles (one of them with a Big Transformer Decal on the Back Window, one with a Big US “Infantry” sticker on his back window, as well as by WA license plate # WEPLAY2) and after they all turned off and I got past Colville, WA, I attempted my cruise control again and it embarked working. I know they have had remote control over my car alarms on my vehicles for a long time now, and it looks to me that they can also remote control my cruise control as well now……

They have been using FOIA DENIALS, FOIA APPEAL DENIALS, GAG ORDERS, NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS AND EVEN – “CLASSIFYING” INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COVER UP THEIR CRIMES AGAINST TARGETED INDIVIDUALS, ACTIVISTS AND JOURNALISTS.

Observe: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car, Q13 FOX News

Witness: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car

SEATTLE — A West Seattle man is sharing a surveillance movie that shows the panicking way thieves are using technology to break into cars.

Witness the movie as a man approaches Tom Dahl’s truck in this driveway. He attempts the treat, but the door is locked. So he takes off his backpack, moves it close to the window. Seconds later, he’s able to get inwards.

Photo Gallery

“He opens the door up,” says Dahl. “The lights went on, it was disarmed.”

Dahl is glad the thief didn’t take his truck. All he did was rummage through the contents of his glove compartment.

“I was brainy enough not to carry anything of value in there. That’s what he was looking for.”

But Dahl is worried about how the thief got in so lightly.

“You used to have a wire that you slipped down the window, when it was mechanical. But now it’s electronic.”

Cases like this are becoming more common across the region.

Lars Carlson says the man who broke into his car in January also appeared to be carrying something in a backpack.

“It’s running through codes automatically or it’s a button they’re pushing or something is happening. But whatever it does, it seems to trick the car into thinking he’s got the legitimate keys.”

Seattle police say they don’t know exactly what kind of device thieves are using, or how it works. But they are worried.

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

Dahl says automakers need to do something to give people a little more security. But until that happens, he’s going to share this movie with as many neighbors as he can.

“I hope other people pay attention, make sure things are secure and locked, and don’t keep things in your car that are of any value.”

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

thirty two comments

Slam1263 (@IKnowBO)

It is just a random code transmitter.

They can transmit a million codes with the thrust of a button.

Tow truck driver have been using them for over twenty years.

Don’t the receivers limit the number of failed attempts per 2nd?

Sadly No they don’t

Rodger Wolkins

They need to emit a cloud of pepper drizzle after three failed attempts.

Fresh Boy

Then cars in parking lots would permanently be admitting pepper bust, in a parking lot hundreds of remote keys are used permanently, so it has to be able to see signals without assuming it is failed attempts. They need to increase the complexity of the codes, add more bits, make it too hard to crack.

ashford
lionfan

Can very likely take the entire damn car if it uses keyless ignition, right?

Testicules

For most cars, the thief would still have to deal with the mechanical steering lock that is released by the mechanical portion of the key.

As for some cars that now have keyless shove button commence features… ?

clovellstc

The car permanently scans for the key. Since this is most likely just a device and sends out a bunch of signals in a row he wouldn’t know which one was for the car, so I doubt it would work on the ignition.

Phillip Coiner

I know how they are doing it. Have the cops send me an e-mail

john Bowler

Witness a classic Forrest Whitaker film “Ghost Dog”. The hero uses one of those code generators to steal luxury cars.

So, They may steal them from Tow Truck Drivers?

Tester

The device works by “pinging” the FOB on the key chain which, in turn, generates a signal to the vehicle. The device only works when the keys are within operational range of the vehicle.

Frank

This techbology isn’t fresh, over a decade old if anything. They demonstrated this in the movie, ‘Gone in sixty Seconds’.

Device is available on aliexpress from china for $600 or less. Clones key fobs and can transmit them. It’s not a mystery.

Thats not how they work. You need access to the original keys and the car to make a clone.

Most people keep their registration and garage door opener in their car. If a thief sees you leave your vehicle in a parking lot and can access your car this way, he can go to your home and rob it while you’re shopping or standing in the parking lot wondering where your car is.

Dan Darius

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

It’s a shame that cops are always reactive instead of proactive.

Dan Darius
Dee Ouchman

It’s a elementary Tesla coil which energised the door lock/unlock servo.

Justa Joe

I don’t need a fresh car that badly. My two thousand five Ford Concentrate has manual (mechanical) doorlocks, manual (palm crank) windows, and a 5-speed manual transmission. Its also carrying 275,000 miles on the odometer.

I’m in no fear of anyone attempting to steal my wheels.

Marc M

Yes, we have the exact same car – two thousand five Ford Concentrate. Looks like a ruddy ordnance vehicle, but I like it because it has NOTHING (except AC). Manual trans, windows, everything. And a freakin’ metal key. I do not like this fresh crap. “The more the over-think the plumbing, the lighter it is to stop up the drain,” in the words of Scotty. And every tour to the stealership to fix the over-thought under-engineered geek fucktoys is an exercise on your wallet.

This is finish rubbish. The rolling code protocol (keyloq) used by keyless entry will only permit two hundred fifty six code attempts before the original key will need to be reset. This is a hoax.

George Johnson

Evidently the cops are NOT one step ahead of the criminals.

Starheart

There are too many COPS that ARE the CRIMINALS OUT THERE.

pithypaul

The thief is going to sue for invasion of his own privacy, as nobody asked him for permission to use his picture. Hey, this is Amerika.

SMARTERTHANYOU

Wow.. these reporters, especially the police department, are frankly imbeciles! The technology is over a decade old, it’s called a laptop and a receiver.

Starheart

Homeland Security Personnel are using very advanced electronic technology to hack into everything now.

People like Kay Griggs, Michael Hastings, Phillip Marshall, Judi Bari and myself have been targeted by some of these these special ops Homeland Security personnel involved in criminal operations in the US. They have been promoting and rewarding war criminals for years from the CIA and Military Black Sites and Torment Facilities, into Homeland Security, FBI, Law Enforcement, and other government agencies across the country, to target citizens for surveillance and crimes.

(See Kay Griggs movies on you tube, as she gives her testimonial for what has been going on for a long time now.)

Since 2011, I’ve been targeted for surveillance burglaries, vandalism, pet torment, vehicle tampering as well as the planting of stolen and unknown origin property and malicious prosecution. My safe deposit box in, Colville, WA ,was even burglarized. I can’t find any organization to help me, out of the dozens and dozens of civil and constitutional rights organizations and attorneys I’ve contacted. I had to get a private investigator to trace license plates and find out who some of the people involved in these targeted black operations are.

I can’t get my FOIA Requests fulfilled for information on my surveillance “Watch List” targeted crimes and it’s even common skill in Washington state that Homeland Security personnel are involved in my targeted surveillance and gang stalking crimes. There has even been one out of court settlement in one case in the Seattle area for these criminal activities by Homeland Security Personnel.

My cruise control stopped working on my one hundred forty mile excursion back from Spokane WA, on Thursday February 26th (about two weeks ago), and I was gang stalked on the road by numerous vehicles (one of them with a Big Transformer Decal on the Back Window, one with a Big US “Infantry” sticker on his back window, as well as by WA license plate # WEPLAY2) and after they all turned off and I got past Colville, WA, I attempted my cruise control again and it embarked working. I know they have had remote control over my car alarms on my vehicles for a long time now, and it looks to me that they can also remote control my cruise control as well now……

They have been using FOIA DENIALS, FOIA APPEAL DENIALS, GAG ORDERS, NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS AND EVEN – “CLASSIFYING” INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COVER UP THEIR CRIMES AGAINST TARGETED INDIVIDUALS, ACTIVISTS AND JOURNALISTS.

Observe: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car, Q13 FOX News

Witness: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car

SEATTLE — A West Seattle man is sharing a surveillance movie that shows the panicking way thieves are using technology to break into cars.

Witness the movie as a man approaches Tom Dahl’s truck in this driveway. He attempts the treat, but the door is locked. So he takes off his backpack, moves it close to the window. Seconds later, he’s able to get inwards.

Photo Gallery

“He opens the door up,” says Dahl. “The lights went on, it was disarmed.”

Dahl is glad the thief didn’t take his truck. All he did was rummage through the contents of his glove compartment.

“I was brainy enough not to carry anything of value in there. That’s what he was looking for.”

But Dahl is worried about how the thief got in so lightly.

“You used to have a wire that you glided down the window, when it was mechanical. But now it’s electronic.”

Cases like this are becoming more common across the region.

Lars Carlson says the man who broke into his car in January also appeared to be carrying something in a backpack.

“It’s running through codes automatically or it’s a button they’re pushing or something is happening. But whatever it does, it seems to trick the car into thinking he’s got the legitimate keys.”

Seattle police say they don’t know exactly what kind of device thieves are using, or how it works. But they are worried.

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

Dahl says automakers need to do something to give people a little more security. But until that happens, he’s going to share this movie with as many neighbors as he can.

“I hope other people pay attention, make sure things are secure and locked, and don’t keep things in your car that are of any value.”

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

thirty two comments

Slam1263 (@IKnowBO)

It is just a random code transmitter.

They can transmit a million codes with the shove of a button.

Tow truck driver have been using them for over twenty years.

Don’t the receivers limit the number of failed attempts per 2nd?

Sadly No they don’t

Rodger Wolkins

They need to emit a cloud of pepper bust after three failed attempts.

Fresh Dude

Then cars in parking lots would permanently be admitting pepper splatter, in a parking lot hundreds of remote keys are used permanently, so it has to be able to see signals without assuming it is failed attempts. They need to increase the complexity of the codes, add more bits, make it too hard to crack.

ashford
lionfan

Can very likely take the entire damn car if it uses keyless ignition, right?

Testicules

For most cars, the thief would still have to deal with the mechanical steering lock that is released by the mechanical portion of the key.

As for some cars that now have keyless thrust button commence features… ?

clovellstc

The car permanently scans for the key. Since this is very likely just a device and sends out a bunch of signals in a row he wouldn’t know which one was for the car, so I doubt it would work on the ignition.

Phillip Coiner

I know how they are doing it. Have the cops send me an e-mail

john Bowler

See a classic Forrest Whitaker film “Ghost Dog”. The hero uses one of those code generators to steal luxury cars.

So, They may steal them from Tow Truck Drivers?

Tester

The device works by “pinging” the FOB on the key chain which, in turn, generates a signal to the vehicle. The device only works when the keys are within operational range of the vehicle.

Frank

This techbology isn’t fresh, over a decade old if anything. They demonstrated this in the movie, ‘Gone in sixty Seconds’.

Device is available on aliexpress from china for $600 or less. Clones key fobs and can transmit them. It’s not a mystery.

Thats not how they work. You need access to the original keys and the car to make a clone.

Most people keep their registration and garage door opener in their car. If a thief witnesses you leave your vehicle in a parking lot and can access your car this way, he can go to your home and rob it while you’re shopping or standing in the parking lot wondering where your car is.

Dan Darius

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

It’s a shame that cops are always reactive instead of proactive.

Dan Darius
Dee Ouchman

It’s a plain Tesla coil which energised the door lock/unlock servo.

Justa Joe

I don’t need a fresh car that badly. My two thousand five Ford Concentrate has manual (mechanical) doorlocks, manual (palm crank) windows, and a 5-speed manual transmission. Its also carrying 275,000 miles on the odometer.

I’m in no fear of anyone attempting to steal my wheels.

Marc M

Yes, we have the exact same car – two thousand five Ford Concentrate. Looks like a ruddy ordnance vehicle, but I like it because it has NOTHING (except AC). Manual trans, windows, everything. And a freakin’ metal key. I do not like this fresh crap. “The more the over-think the plumbing, the lighter it is to stop up the drain,” in the words of Scotty. And every journey to the stealership to fix the over-thought under-engineered geek fucktoys is an exercise on your wallet.

This is finish rubbish. The rolling code protocol (keyloq) used by keyless entry will only permit two hundred fifty six code attempts before the original key will need to be reset. This is a hoax.

George Johnson

Evidently the cops are NOT one step ahead of the criminals.

Starheart

There are too many COPS that ARE the CRIMINALS OUT THERE.

pithypaul

The thief is going to sue for invasion of his own privacy, as nobody asked him for permission to use his picture. Hey, this is Amerika.

SMARTERTHANYOU

Wow.. these reporters, especially the police department, are frankly imbeciles! The technology is over a decade old, it’s called a laptop and a receiver.

Starheart

Homeland Security Personnel are using very advanced electronic technology to hack into everything now.

People like Kay Griggs, Michael Hastings, Phillip Marshall, Judi Bari and myself have been targeted by some of these these special ops Homeland Security personnel involved in criminal operations in the US. They have been promoting and rewarding war criminals for years from the CIA and Military Black Sites and Torment Facilities, into Homeland Security, FBI, Law Enforcement, and other government agencies across the country, to target citizens for surveillance and crimes.

(See Kay Griggs movies on you tube, as she gives her testimonial for what has been going on for a long time now.)

Since 2011, I’ve been targeted for surveillance burglaries, vandalism, pet torment, vehicle tampering as well as the planting of stolen and unknown origin property and malicious prosecution. My safe deposit box in, Colville, WA ,was even burglarized. I can’t find any organization to help me, out of the dozens and dozens of civil and constitutional rights organizations and attorneys I’ve contacted. I had to get a private investigator to trace license plates and find out who some of the people involved in these targeted black operations are.

I can’t get my FOIA Requests fulfilled for information on my surveillance “Watch List” targeted crimes and it’s even common skill in Washington state that Homeland Security personnel are involved in my targeted surveillance and gang stalking crimes. There has even been one out of court settlement in one case in the Seattle area for these criminal activities by Homeland Security Personnel.

My cruise control stopped working on my one hundred forty mile tour back from Spokane WA, on Thursday February 26th (about two weeks ago), and I was gang stalked on the road by numerous vehicles (one of them with a Big Transformer Decal on the Back Window, one with a Big US “Infantry” sticker on his back window, as well as by WA license plate # WEPLAY2) and after they all turned off and I got past Colville, WA, I attempted my cruise control again and it began working. I know they have had remote control over my car alarms on my vehicles for a long time now, and it looks to me that they can also remote control my cruise control as well now……

They have been using FOIA DENIALS, FOIA APPEAL DENIALS, GAG ORDERS, NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS AND EVEN – “CLASSIFYING” INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COVER UP THEIR CRIMES AGAINST TARGETED INDIVIDUALS, ACTIVISTS AND JOURNALISTS.

See: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car, Q13 FOX News

See: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car

SEATTLE — A West Seattle man is sharing a surveillance movie that shows the scaring way thieves are using technology to break into cars.

Observe the movie as a man approaches Tom Dahl’s truck in this driveway. He attempts the treat, but the door is locked. So he takes off his backpack, moves it close to the window. Seconds later, he’s able to get inwards.

Photo Gallery

“He opens the door up,” says Dahl. “The lights went on, it was disarmed.”

Dahl is glad the thief didn’t take his truck. All he did was rummage through the contents of his glove compartment.

“I was wise enough not to carry anything of value in there. That’s what he was looking for.”

But Dahl is worried about how the thief got in so lightly.

“You used to have a wire that you slipped down the window, when it was mechanical. But now it’s electronic.”

Cases like this are becoming more common across the region.

Lars Carlson says the man who broke into his car in January also appeared to be carrying something in a backpack.

“It’s running through codes automatically or it’s a button they’re pushing or something is happening. But whatever it does, it seems to trick the car into thinking he’s got the legitimate keys.”

Seattle police say they don’t know exactly what kind of device thieves are using, or how it works. But they are worried.

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

Dahl says automakers need to do something to give people a little more security. But until that happens, he’s going to share this movie with as many neighbors as he can.

“I hope other people pay attention, make sure things are secure and locked, and don’t keep things in your car that are of any value.”

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

thirty two comments

Slam1263 (@IKnowBO)

It is just a random code transmitter.

They can transmit a million codes with the shove of a button.

Tow truck driver have been using them for over twenty years.

Don’t the receivers limit the number of failed attempts per 2nd?

Sadly No they don’t

Rodger Wolkins

They need to emit a cloud of pepper burst after three failed attempts.

Fresh Man

Then cars in parking lots would permanently be admitting pepper dump, in a parking lot hundreds of remote keys are used permanently, so it has to be able to see signals without assuming it is failed attempts. They need to increase the complexity of the codes, add more bits, make it too hard to crack.

ashford
lionfan

Can very likely take the entire damn car if it uses keyless ignition, right?

Testicules

For most cars, the thief would still have to deal with the mechanical steering lock that is released by the mechanical portion of the key.

As for some cars that now have keyless thrust button commence features… ?

clovellstc

The car permanently scans for the key. Since this is most likely just a device and sends out a bunch of signals in a row he wouldn’t know which one was for the car, so I doubt it would work on the ignition.

Phillip Coiner

I know how they are doing it. Have the cops send me an e-mail

john Bowler

Observe a classic Forrest Whitaker film “Ghost Dog”. The hero uses one of those code generators to steal luxury cars.

So, They may steal them from Tow Truck Drivers?

Tester

The device works by “pinging” the FOB on the key chain which, in turn, generates a signal to the vehicle. The device only works when the keys are within operational range of the vehicle.

Frank

This techbology isn’t fresh, over a decade old if anything. They demonstrated this in the movie, ‘Gone in sixty Seconds’.

Device is available on aliexpress from china for $600 or less. Clones key fobs and can transmit them. It’s not a mystery.

Thats not how they work. You need access to the original keys and the car to make a clone.

Most people keep their registration and garage door opener in their car. If a thief observes you leave your vehicle in a parking lot and can access your car this way, he can go to your home and rob it while you’re shopping or standing in the parking lot wondering where your car is.

Dan Darius

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

It’s a shame that cops are always reactive instead of proactive.

Dan Darius
Dee Ouchman

It’s a elementary Tesla coil which energised the door lock/unlock servo.

Justa Joe

I don’t need a fresh car that badly. My two thousand five Ford Concentrate has manual (mechanical) doorlocks, manual (forearm crank) windows, and a 5-speed manual transmission. Its also carrying 275,000 miles on the odometer.

I’m in no fear of anyone attempting to steal my wheels.

Marc M

Yes, we have the exact same car – two thousand five Ford Concentrate. Looks like a ruddy ordnance vehicle, but I like it because it has NOTHING (except AC). Manual trans, windows, everything. And a freakin’ metal key. I do not like this fresh crap. “The more the over-think the plumbing, the lighter it is to stop up the drain,” in the words of Scotty. And every tour to the stealership to fix the over-thought under-engineered geek fucktoys is an exercise on your wallet.

This is accomplish rubbish. The rolling code protocol (keyloq) used by keyless entry will only permit two hundred fifty six code attempts before the original key will need to be reset. This is a hoax.

George Johnson

Evidently the cops are NOT one step ahead of the criminals.

Starheart

There are too many COPS that ARE the CRIMINALS OUT THERE.

pithypaul

The thief is going to sue for invasion of his own privacy, as nobody asked him for permission to use his photo. Hey, this is Amerika.

SMARTERTHANYOU

Wow.. these reporters, especially the police department, are frankly imbeciles! The technology is over a decade old, it’s called a laptop and a receiver.

Starheart

Homeland Security Personnel are using very advanced electronic technology to hack into everything now.

People like Kay Griggs, Michael Hastings, Phillip Marshall, Judi Bari and myself have been targeted by some of these these special ops Homeland Security personnel involved in criminal operations in the US. They have been promoting and rewarding war criminals for years from the CIA and Military Black Sites and Torment Facilities, into Homeland Security, FBI, Law Enforcement, and other government agencies across the country, to target citizens for surveillance and crimes.

(See Kay Griggs movies on you tube, as she gives her testimonial for what has been going on for a long time now.)

Since 2011, I’ve been targeted for surveillance burglaries, vandalism, pet torment, vehicle tampering as well as the planting of stolen and unknown origin property and malicious prosecution. My safe deposit box in, Colville, WA ,was even burglarized. I can’t find any organization to help me, out of the dozens and dozens of civil and constitutional rights organizations and attorneys I’ve contacted. I had to get a private investigator to trace license plates and find out who some of the people involved in these targeted black operations are.

I can’t get my FOIA Requests fulfilled for information on my surveillance “Watch List” targeted crimes and it’s even common skill in Washington state that Homeland Security personnel are involved in my targeted surveillance and gang stalking crimes. There has even been one out of court settlement in one case in the Seattle area for these criminal activities by Homeland Security Personnel.

My cruise control stopped working on my one hundred forty mile journey back from Spokane WA, on Thursday February 26th (about two weeks ago), and I was gang stalked on the road by numerous vehicles (one of them with a Big Transformer Decal on the Back Window, one with a Big US “Infantry” sticker on his back window, as well as by WA license plate # WEPLAY2) and after they all turned off and I got past Colville, WA, I attempted my cruise control again and it commenced working. I know they have had remote control over my car alarms on my vehicles for a long time now, and it looks to me that they can also remote control my cruise control as well now……

They have been using FOIA DENIALS, FOIA APPEAL DENIALS, GAG ORDERS, NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS AND EVEN – “CLASSIFYING” INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COVER UP THEIR CRIMES AGAINST TARGETED INDIVIDUALS, ACTIVISTS AND JOURNALISTS.

See: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car, Q13 FOX News

Witness: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car

SEATTLE — A West Seattle man is sharing a surveillance movie that shows the panicking way thieves are using technology to break into cars.

See the movie as a man approaches Tom Dahl’s truck in this driveway. He attempts the treat, but the door is locked. So he takes off his backpack, moves it close to the window. Seconds later, he’s able to get inwards.

Photo Gallery

“He opens the door up,” says Dahl. “The lights went on, it was disarmed.”

Dahl is glad the thief didn’t take his truck. All he did was rummage through the contents of his glove compartment.

“I was clever enough not to carry anything of value in there. That’s what he was looking for.”

But Dahl is worried about how the thief got in so lightly.

“You used to have a wire that you glided down the window, when it was mechanical. But now it’s electronic.”

Cases like this are becoming more common across the region.

Lars Carlson says the man who broke into his car in January also appeared to be carrying something in a backpack.

“It’s running through codes automatically or it’s a button they’re pushing or something is happening. But whatever it does, it seems to trick the car into thinking he’s got the legitimate keys.”

Seattle police say they don’t know exactly what kind of device thieves are using, or how it works. But they are worried.

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

Dahl says automakers need to do something to give people a little more security. But until that happens, he’s going to share this movie with as many neighbors as he can.

“I hope other people pay attention, make sure things are secure and locked, and don’t keep things in your car that are of any value.”

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

thirty two comments

Slam1263 (@IKnowBO)

It is just a random code transmitter.

They can transmit a million codes with the shove of a button.

Tow truck driver have been using them for over twenty years.

Don’t the receivers limit the number of failed attempts per 2nd?

Sadly No they don’t

Rodger Wolkins

They need to emit a cloud of pepper splash after three failed attempts.

Fresh Man

Then cars in parking lots would permanently be admitting pepper dump, in a parking lot hundreds of remote keys are used permanently, so it has to be able to see signals without assuming it is failed attempts. They need to increase the complexity of the codes, add more bits, make it too hard to crack.

ashford
lionfan

Can most likely take the entire damn car if it uses keyless ignition, right?

Testicules

For most cars, the thief would still have to deal with the mechanical steering lock that is released by the mechanical portion of the key.

As for some cars that now have keyless thrust button begin features… ?

clovellstc

The car permanently scans for the key. Since this is most likely just a device and sends out a bunch of signals in a row he wouldn’t know which one was for the car, so I doubt it would work on the ignition.

Phillip Coiner

I know how they are doing it. Have the cops send me an e-mail

john Bowler

See a classic Forrest Whitaker film “Ghost Dog”. The hero uses one of those code generators to steal luxury cars.

So, They may steal them from Tow Truck Drivers?

Tester

The device works by “pinging” the FOB on the key chain which, in turn, generates a signal to the vehicle. The device only works when the keys are within operational range of the vehicle.

Frank

This techbology isn’t fresh, over a decade old if anything. They demonstrated this in the movie, ‘Gone in sixty Seconds’.

Device is available on aliexpress from china for $600 or less. Clones key fobs and can transmit them. It’s not a mystery.

Thats not how they work. You need access to the original keys and the car to make a clone.

Most people keep their registration and garage door opener in their car. If a thief sees you leave your vehicle in a parking lot and can access your car this way, he can go to your home and rob it while you’re shopping or standing in the parking lot wondering where your car is.

Dan Darius

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

It’s a shame that cops are always reactive instead of proactive.

Dan Darius
Dee Ouchman

It’s a ordinary Tesla coil which energised the door lock/unlock servo.

Justa Joe

I don’t need a fresh car that badly. My two thousand five Ford Concentrate has manual (mechanical) doorlocks, manual (mitt crank) windows, and a 5-speed manual transmission. Its also carrying 275,000 miles on the odometer.

I’m in no fear of anyone attempting to steal my wheels.

Marc M

Yes, we have the exact same car – two thousand five Ford Concentrate. Looks like a ruddy ordnance vehicle, but I like it because it has NOTHING (except AC). Manual trans, windows, everything. And a freakin’ metal key. I do not like this fresh crap. “The more the over-think the plumbing, the lighter it is to stop up the drain,” in the words of Scotty. And every excursion to the stealership to fix the over-thought under-engineered geek fucktoys is an exercise on your wallet.

This is accomplish rubbish. The rolling code protocol (keyloq) used by keyless entry will only permit two hundred fifty six code attempts before the original key will need to be reset. This is a hoax.

George Johnson

Evidently the cops are NOT one step ahead of the criminals.

Starheart

There are too many COPS that ARE the CRIMINALS OUT THERE.

pithypaul

The thief is going to sue for invasion of his own privacy, as nobody asked him for permission to use his picture. Hey, this is Amerika.

SMARTERTHANYOU

Wow.. these reporters, especially the police department, are frankly imbeciles! The technology is over a decade old, it’s called a laptop and a receiver.

Starheart

Homeland Security Personnel are using very advanced electronic technology to hack into everything now.

People like Kay Griggs, Michael Hastings, Phillip Marshall, Judi Bari and myself have been targeted by some of these these special ops Homeland Security personnel involved in criminal operations in the US. They have been promoting and rewarding war criminals for years from the CIA and Military Black Sites and Torment Facilities, into Homeland Security, FBI, Law Enforcement, and other government agencies across the country, to target citizens for surveillance and crimes.

(See Kay Griggs movies on you tube, as she gives her testimonial for what has been going on for a long time now.)

Since 2011, I’ve been targeted for surveillance burglaries, vandalism, pet torment, vehicle tampering as well as the planting of stolen and unknown origin property and malicious prosecution. My safe deposit box in, Colville, WA ,was even burglarized. I can’t find any organization to help me, out of the dozens and dozens of civil and constitutional rights organizations and attorneys I’ve contacted. I had to get a private investigator to trace license plates and find out who some of the people involved in these targeted black operations are.

I can’t get my FOIA Requests fulfilled for information on my surveillance “Watch List” targeted crimes and it’s even common skill in Washington state that Homeland Security personnel are involved in my targeted surveillance and gang stalking crimes. There has even been one out of court settlement in one case in the Seattle area for these criminal activities by Homeland Security Personnel.

My cruise control stopped working on my one hundred forty mile journey back from Spokane WA, on Thursday February 26th (about two weeks ago), and I was gang stalked on the road by numerous vehicles (one of them with a Big Transformer Decal on the Back Window, one with a Big US “Infantry” sticker on his back window, as well as by WA license plate # WEPLAY2) and after they all turned off and I got past Colville, WA, I attempted my cruise control again and it commenced working. I know they have had remote control over my car alarms on my vehicles for a long time now, and it looks to me that they can also remote control my cruise control as well now……

They have been using FOIA DENIALS, FOIA APPEAL DENIALS, GAG ORDERS, NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS AND EVEN – “CLASSIFYING” INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COVER UP THEIR CRIMES AGAINST TARGETED INDIVIDUALS, ACTIVISTS AND JOURNALISTS.

Witness: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car, Q13 FOX News

Witness: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car

SEATTLE — A West Seattle man is sharing a surveillance movie that shows the scaring way thieves are using technology to break into cars.

Witness the movie as a man approaches Tom Dahl’s truck in this driveway. He attempts the treat, but the door is locked. So he takes off his backpack, moves it close to the window. Seconds later, he’s able to get inwards.

Photo Gallery

“He opens the door up,” says Dahl. “The lights went on, it was disarmed.”

Dahl is glad the thief didn’t take his truck. All he did was rummage through the contents of his glove compartment.

“I was brainy enough not to carry anything of value in there. That’s what he was looking for.”

But Dahl is worried about how the thief got in so lightly.

“You used to have a wire that you glided down the window, when it was mechanical. But now it’s electronic.”

Cases like this are becoming more common across the region.

Lars Carlson says the man who broke into his car in January also appeared to be carrying something in a backpack.

“It’s running through codes automatically or it’s a button they’re pushing or something is happening. But whatever it does, it seems to trick the car into thinking he’s got the legitimate keys.”

Seattle police say they don’t know exactly what kind of device thieves are using, or how it works. But they are worried.

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

Dahl says automakers need to do something to give people a little more security. But until that happens, he’s going to share this movie with as many neighbors as he can.

“I hope other people pay attention, make sure things are secure and locked, and don’t keep things in your car that are of any value.”

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

thirty two comments

Slam1263 (@IKnowBO)

It is just a random code transmitter.

They can transmit a million codes with the thrust of a button.

Tow truck driver have been using them for over twenty years.

Don’t the receivers limit the number of failed attempts per 2nd?

Sadly No they don’t

Rodger Wolkins

They need to emit a cloud of pepper splatter after three failed attempts.

Fresh Fellow

Then cars in parking lots would permanently be admitting pepper drizzle, in a parking lot hundreds of remote keys are used permanently, so it has to be able to see signals without assuming it is failed attempts. They need to increase the complexity of the codes, add more bits, make it too hard to crack.

ashford
lionfan

Can most likely take the entire damn car if it uses keyless ignition, right?

Testicules

For most cars, the thief would still have to deal with the mechanical steering lock that is released by the mechanical portion of the key.

As for some cars that now have keyless thrust button begin features… ?

clovellstc

The car permanently scans for the key. Since this is most likely just a device and sends out a bunch of signals in a row he wouldn’t know which one was for the car, so I doubt it would work on the ignition.

Phillip Coiner

I know how they are doing it. Have the cops send me an e-mail

john Bowler

Observe a classic Forrest Whitaker film “Ghost Dog”. The hero uses one of those code generators to steal luxury cars.

So, They may steal them from Tow Truck Drivers?

Tester

The device works by “pinging” the FOB on the key chain which, in turn, generates a signal to the vehicle. The device only works when the keys are within operational range of the vehicle.

Frank

This techbology isn’t fresh, over a decade old if anything. They demonstrated this in the movie, ‘Gone in sixty Seconds’.

Device is available on aliexpress from china for $600 or less. Clones key fobs and can transmit them. It’s not a mystery.

Thats not how they work. You need access to the original keys and the car to make a clone.

Most people keep their registration and garage door opener in their car. If a thief witnesses you leave your vehicle in a parking lot and can access your car this way, he can go to your home and rob it while you’re shopping or standing in the parking lot wondering where your car is.

Dan Darius

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

It’s a shame that cops are always reactive instead of proactive.

Dan Darius
Dee Ouchman

It’s a ordinary Tesla coil which energised the door lock/unlock servo.

Justa Joe

I don’t need a fresh car that badly. My two thousand five Ford Concentrate has manual (mechanical) doorlocks, manual (mitt crank) windows, and a 5-speed manual transmission. Its also carrying 275,000 miles on the odometer.

I’m in no fear of anyone attempting to steal my wheels.

Marc M

Yes, we have the exact same car – two thousand five Ford Concentrate. Looks like a ruddy ordnance vehicle, but I like it because it has NOTHING (except AC). Manual trans, windows, everything. And a freakin’ metal key. I do not like this fresh crap. “The more the over-think the plumbing, the lighter it is to stop up the drain,” in the words of Scotty. And every excursion to the stealership to fix the over-thought under-engineered geek fucktoys is an exercise on your wallet.

This is finish rubbish. The rolling code protocol (keyloq) used by keyless entry will only permit two hundred fifty six code attempts before the original key will need to be reset. This is a hoax.

George Johnson

Evidently the cops are NOT one step ahead of the criminals.

Starheart

There are too many COPS that ARE the CRIMINALS OUT THERE.

pithypaul

The thief is going to sue for invasion of his own privacy, as nobody asked him for permission to use his photo. Hey, this is Amerika.

SMARTERTHANYOU

Wow.. these reporters, especially the police department, are frankly imbeciles! The technology is over a decade old, it’s called a laptop and a receiver.

Starheart

Homeland Security Personnel are using very advanced electronic technology to hack into everything now.

People like Kay Griggs, Michael Hastings, Phillip Marshall, Judi Bari and myself have been targeted by some of these these special ops Homeland Security personnel involved in criminal operations in the US. They have been promoting and rewarding war criminals for years from the CIA and Military Black Sites and Torment Facilities, into Homeland Security, FBI, Law Enforcement, and other government agencies across the country, to target citizens for surveillance and crimes.

(Observe Kay Griggs movies on you tube, as she gives her testimonial for what has been going on for a long time now.)

Since 2011, I’ve been targeted for surveillance burglaries, vandalism, pet torment, vehicle tampering as well as the planting of stolen and unknown origin property and malicious prosecution. My safe deposit box in, Colville, WA ,was even burglarized. I can’t find any organization to help me, out of the dozens and dozens of civil and constitutional rights organizations and attorneys I’ve contacted. I had to get a private investigator to trace license plates and find out who some of the people involved in these targeted black operations are.

I can’t get my FOIA Requests fulfilled for information on my surveillance “Watch List” targeted crimes and it’s even common skill in Washington state that Homeland Security personnel are involved in my targeted surveillance and gang stalking crimes. There has even been one out of court settlement in one case in the Seattle area for these criminal activities by Homeland Security Personnel.

My cruise control stopped working on my one hundred forty mile journey back from Spokane WA, on Thursday February 26th (about two weeks ago), and I was gang stalked on the road by numerous vehicles (one of them with a Big Transformer Decal on the Back Window, one with a Big US “Infantry” sticker on his back window, as well as by WA license plate # WEPLAY2) and after they all turned off and I got past Colville, WA, I attempted my cruise control again and it commenced working. I know they have had remote control over my car alarms on my vehicles for a long time now, and it looks to me that they can also remote control my cruise control as well now……

They have been using FOIA DENIALS, FOIA APPEAL DENIALS, GAG ORDERS, NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS AND EVEN – “CLASSIFYING” INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COVER UP THEIR CRIMES AGAINST TARGETED INDIVIDUALS, ACTIVISTS AND JOURNALISTS.

See: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car, Q13 FOX News

Witness: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car

SEATTLE — A West Seattle man is sharing a surveillance movie that shows the scaring way thieves are using technology to break into cars.

Observe the movie as a man approaches Tom Dahl’s truck in this driveway. He attempts the treat, but the door is locked. So he takes off his backpack, moves it close to the window. Seconds later, he’s able to get inwards.

Photo Gallery

“He opens the door up,” says Dahl. “The lights went on, it was disarmed.”

Dahl is glad the thief didn’t take his truck. All he did was rummage through the contents of his glove compartment.

“I was brainy enough not to carry anything of value in there. That’s what he was looking for.”

But Dahl is worried about how the thief got in so lightly.

“You used to have a wire that you slipped down the window, when it was mechanical. But now it’s electronic.”

Cases like this are becoming more common across the region.

Lars Carlson says the man who broke into his car in January also appeared to be carrying something in a backpack.

“It’s running through codes automatically or it’s a button they’re pushing or something is happening. But whatever it does, it seems to trick the car into thinking he’s got the legitimate keys.”

Seattle police say they don’t know exactly what kind of device thieves are using, or how it works. But they are worried.

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

Dahl says automakers need to do something to give people a little more security. But until that happens, he’s going to share this movie with as many neighbors as he can.

“I hope other people pay attention, make sure things are secure and locked, and don’t keep things in your car that are of any value.”

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

thirty two comments

Slam1263 (@IKnowBO)

It is just a random code transmitter.

They can transmit a million codes with the thrust of a button.

Tow truck driver have been using them for over twenty years.

Don’t the receivers limit the number of failed attempts per 2nd?

Sadly No they don’t

Rodger Wolkins

They need to emit a cloud of pepper squirt after three failed attempts.

Fresh Man

Then cars in parking lots would permanently be admitting pepper burst, in a parking lot hundreds of remote keys are used permanently, so it has to be able to see signals without assuming it is failed attempts. They need to increase the complexity of the codes, add more bits, make it too hard to crack.

ashford
lionfan

Can most likely take the entire damn car if it uses keyless ignition, right?

Testicules

For most cars, the thief would still have to deal with the mechanical steering lock that is released by the mechanical portion of the key.

As for some cars that now have keyless shove button embark features… ?

clovellstc

The car permanently scans for the key. Since this is very likely just a device and sends out a bunch of signals in a row he wouldn’t know which one was for the car, so I doubt it would work on the ignition.

Phillip Coiner

I know how they are doing it. Have the cops send me an e-mail

john Bowler

Observe a classic Forrest Whitaker film “Ghost Dog”. The hero uses one of those code generators to steal luxury cars.

So, They may steal them from Tow Truck Drivers?

Tester

The device works by “pinging” the FOB on the key chain which, in turn, generates a signal to the vehicle. The device only works when the keys are within operational range of the vehicle.

Frank

This techbology isn’t fresh, over a decade old if anything. They demonstrated this in the movie, ‘Gone in sixty Seconds’.

Device is available on aliexpress from china for $600 or less. Clones key fobs and can transmit them. It’s not a mystery.

Thats not how they work. You need access to the original keys and the car to make a clone.

Most people keep their registration and garage door opener in their car. If a thief observes you leave your vehicle in a parking lot and can access your car this way, he can go to your home and rob it while you’re shopping or standing in the parking lot wondering where your car is.

Dan Darius

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

It’s a shame that cops are always reactive instead of proactive.

Dan Darius
Dee Ouchman

It’s a ordinary Tesla coil which energised the door lock/unlock servo.

Justa Joe

I don’t need a fresh car that badly. My two thousand five Ford Concentrate has manual (mechanical) doorlocks, manual (forearm crank) windows, and a 5-speed manual transmission. Its also carrying 275,000 miles on the odometer.

I’m in no fear of anyone attempting to steal my wheels.

Marc M

Yes, we have the exact same car – two thousand five Ford Concentrate. Looks like a ruddy ordnance vehicle, but I like it because it has NOTHING (except AC). Manual trans, windows, everything. And a freakin’ metal key. I do not like this fresh crap. “The more the over-think the plumbing, the lighter it is to stop up the drain,” in the words of Scotty. And every journey to the stealership to fix the over-thought under-engineered geek fucktoys is an exercise on your wallet.

This is accomplish rubbish. The rolling code protocol (keyloq) used by keyless entry will only permit two hundred fifty six code attempts before the original key will need to be reset. This is a hoax.

George Johnson

Evidently the cops are NOT one step ahead of the criminals.

Starheart

There are too many COPS that ARE the CRIMINALS OUT THERE.

pithypaul

The thief is going to sue for invasion of his own privacy, as nobody asked him for permission to use his pic. Hey, this is Amerika.

SMARTERTHANYOU

Wow.. these reporters, especially the police department, are frankly imbeciles! The technology is over a decade old, it’s called a laptop and a receiver.

Starheart

Homeland Security Personnel are using very advanced electronic technology to hack into everything now.

People like Kay Griggs, Michael Hastings, Phillip Marshall, Judi Bari and myself have been targeted by some of these these special ops Homeland Security personnel involved in criminal operations in the US. They have been promoting and rewarding war criminals for years from the CIA and Military Black Sites and Torment Facilities, into Homeland Security, FBI, Law Enforcement, and other government agencies across the country, to target citizens for surveillance and crimes.

(See Kay Griggs movies on you tube, as she gives her testimonial for what has been going on for a long time now.)

Since 2011, I’ve been targeted for surveillance burglaries, vandalism, pet torment, vehicle tampering as well as the planting of stolen and unknown origin property and malicious prosecution. My safe deposit box in, Colville, WA ,was even burglarized. I can’t find any organization to help me, out of the dozens and dozens of civil and constitutional rights organizations and attorneys I’ve contacted. I had to get a private investigator to trace license plates and find out who some of the people involved in these targeted black operations are.

I can’t get my FOIA Requests fulfilled for information on my surveillance “Watch List” targeted crimes and it’s even common skill in Washington state that Homeland Security personnel are involved in my targeted surveillance and gang stalking crimes. There has even been one out of court settlement in one case in the Seattle area for these criminal activities by Homeland Security Personnel.

My cruise control stopped working on my one hundred forty mile journey back from Spokane WA, on Thursday February 26th (about two weeks ago), and I was gang stalked on the road by numerous vehicles (one of them with a Big Transformer Decal on the Back Window, one with a Big US “Infantry” sticker on his back window, as well as by WA license plate # WEPLAY2) and after they all turned off and I got past Colville, WA, I attempted my cruise control again and it embarked working. I know they have had remote control over my car alarms on my vehicles for a long time now, and it looks to me that they can also remote control my cruise control as well now……

They have been using FOIA DENIALS, FOIA APPEAL DENIALS, GAG ORDERS, NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS AND EVEN – “CLASSIFYING” INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COVER UP THEIR CRIMES AGAINST TARGETED INDIVIDUALS, ACTIVISTS AND JOURNALISTS.

Observe: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car, Q13 FOX News

Witness: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car

SEATTLE — A West Seattle man is sharing a surveillance movie that shows the panicking way thieves are using technology to break into cars.

Witness the movie as a man approaches Tom Dahl’s truck in this driveway. He attempts the treat, but the door is locked. So he takes off his backpack, moves it close to the window. Seconds later, he’s able to get inwards.

Photo Gallery

“He opens the door up,” says Dahl. “The lights went on, it was disarmed.”

Dahl is glad the thief didn’t take his truck. All he did was rummage through the contents of his glove compartment.

“I was brainy enough not to carry anything of value in there. That’s what he was looking for.”

But Dahl is worried about how the thief got in so lightly.

“You used to have a wire that you glided down the window, when it was mechanical. But now it’s electronic.”

Cases like this are becoming more common across the region.

Lars Carlson says the man who broke into his car in January also appeared to be carrying something in a backpack.

“It’s running through codes automatically or it’s a button they’re pushing or something is happening. But whatever it does, it seems to trick the car into thinking he’s got the legitimate keys.”

Seattle police say they don’t know exactly what kind of device thieves are using, or how it works. But they are worried.

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

Dahl says automakers need to do something to give people a little more security. But until that happens, he’s going to share this movie with as many neighbors as he can.

“I hope other people pay attention, make sure things are secure and locked, and don’t keep things in your car that are of any value.”

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

thirty two comments

Slam1263 (@IKnowBO)

It is just a random code transmitter.

They can transmit a million codes with the shove of a button.

Tow truck driver have been using them for over twenty years.

Don’t the receivers limit the number of failed attempts per 2nd?

Sadly No they don’t

Rodger Wolkins

They need to emit a cloud of pepper sploog after three failed attempts.

Fresh Boy

Then cars in parking lots would permanently be admitting pepper drizzle, in a parking lot hundreds of remote keys are used permanently, so it has to be able to see signals without assuming it is failed attempts. They need to increase the complexity of the codes, add more bits, make it too hard to crack.

ashford
lionfan

Can most likely take the entire damn car if it uses keyless ignition, right?

Testicules

For most cars, the thief would still have to deal with the mechanical steering lock that is released by the mechanical portion of the key.

As for some cars that now have keyless shove button embark features… ?

clovellstc

The car permanently scans for the key. Since this is very likely just a device and sends out a bunch of signals in a row he wouldn’t know which one was for the car, so I doubt it would work on the ignition.

Phillip Coiner

I know how they are doing it. Have the cops send me an e-mail

john Bowler

Witness a classic Forrest Whitaker film “Ghost Dog”. The hero uses one of those code generators to steal luxury cars.

So, They may steal them from Tow Truck Drivers?

Tester

The device works by “pinging” the FOB on the key chain which, in turn, generates a signal to the vehicle. The device only works when the keys are within operational range of the vehicle.

Frank

This techbology isn’t fresh, over a decade old if anything. They demonstrated this in the movie, ‘Gone in sixty Seconds’.

Device is available on aliexpress from china for $600 or less. Clones key fobs and can transmit them. It’s not a mystery.

Thats not how they work. You need access to the original keys and the car to make a clone.

Most people keep their registration and garage door opener in their car. If a thief witnesses you leave your vehicle in a parking lot and can access your car this way, he can go to your home and rob it while you’re shopping or standing in the parking lot wondering where your car is.

Dan Darius

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

It’s a shame that cops are always reactive instead of proactive.

Dan Darius
Dee Ouchman

It’s a ordinary Tesla coil which energised the door lock/unlock servo.

Justa Joe

I don’t need a fresh car that badly. My two thousand five Ford Concentrate has manual (mechanical) doorlocks, manual (forearm crank) windows, and a 5-speed manual transmission. Its also carrying 275,000 miles on the odometer.

I’m in no fear of anyone attempting to steal my wheels.

Marc M

Yes, we have the exact same car – two thousand five Ford Concentrate. Looks like a ruddy ordnance vehicle, but I like it because it has NOTHING (except AC). Manual trans, windows, everything. And a freakin’ metal key. I do not like this fresh crap. “The more the over-think the plumbing, the lighter it is to stop up the drain,” in the words of Scotty. And every tour to the stealership to fix the over-thought under-engineered geek fucktoys is an exercise on your wallet.

This is accomplish rubbish. The rolling code protocol (keyloq) used by keyless entry will only permit two hundred fifty six code attempts before the original key will need to be reset. This is a hoax.

George Johnson

Evidently the cops are NOT one step ahead of the criminals.

Starheart

There are too many COPS that ARE the CRIMINALS OUT THERE.

pithypaul

The thief is going to sue for invasion of his own privacy, as nobody asked him for permission to use his picture. Hey, this is Amerika.

SMARTERTHANYOU

Wow.. these reporters, especially the police department, are frankly imbeciles! The technology is over a decade old, it’s called a laptop and a receiver.

Starheart

Homeland Security Personnel are using very advanced electronic technology to hack into everything now.

People like Kay Griggs, Michael Hastings, Phillip Marshall, Judi Bari and myself have been targeted by some of these these special ops Homeland Security personnel involved in criminal operations in the US. They have been promoting and rewarding war criminals for years from the CIA and Military Black Sites and Torment Facilities, into Homeland Security, FBI, Law Enforcement, and other government agencies across the country, to target citizens for surveillance and crimes.

(Witness Kay Griggs movies on you tube, as she gives her testimonial for what has been going on for a long time now.)

Since 2011, I’ve been targeted for surveillance burglaries, vandalism, pet torment, vehicle tampering as well as the planting of stolen and unknown origin property and malicious prosecution. My safe deposit box in, Colville, WA ,was even burglarized. I can’t find any organization to help me, out of the dozens and dozens of civil and constitutional rights organizations and attorneys I’ve contacted. I had to get a private investigator to trace license plates and find out who some of the people involved in these targeted black operations are.

I can’t get my FOIA Requests fulfilled for information on my surveillance “Watch List” targeted crimes and it’s even common skill in Washington state that Homeland Security personnel are involved in my targeted surveillance and gang stalking crimes. There has even been one out of court settlement in one case in the Seattle area for these criminal activities by Homeland Security Personnel.

My cruise control stopped working on my one hundred forty mile excursion back from Spokane WA, on Thursday February 26th (about two weeks ago), and I was gang stalked on the road by numerous vehicles (one of them with a Big Transformer Decal on the Back Window, one with a Big US “Infantry” sticker on his back window, as well as by WA license plate # WEPLAY2) and after they all turned off and I got past Colville, WA, I attempted my cruise control again and it commenced working. I know they have had remote control over my car alarms on my vehicles for a long time now, and it looks to me that they can also remote control my cruise control as well now……

They have been using FOIA DENIALS, FOIA APPEAL DENIALS, GAG ORDERS, NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS AND EVEN – “CLASSIFYING” INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COVER UP THEIR CRIMES AGAINST TARGETED INDIVIDUALS, ACTIVISTS AND JOURNALISTS.

Witness: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car, Q13 FOX News

Observe: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car

SEATTLE — A West Seattle man is sharing a surveillance movie that shows the panicking way thieves are using technology to break into cars.

Witness the movie as a man approaches Tom Dahl’s truck in this driveway. He attempts the treat, but the door is locked. So he takes off his backpack, moves it close to the window. Seconds later, he’s able to get inwards.

Photo Gallery

“He opens the door up,” says Dahl. “The lights went on, it was disarmed.”

Dahl is glad the thief didn’t take his truck. All he did was rummage through the contents of his glove compartment.

“I was clever enough not to carry anything of value in there. That’s what he was looking for.”

But Dahl is worried about how the thief got in so lightly.

“You used to have a wire that you glided down the window, when it was mechanical. But now it’s electronic.”

Cases like this are becoming more common across the region.

Lars Carlson says the man who broke into his car in January also appeared to be carrying something in a backpack.

“It’s running through codes automatically or it’s a button they’re pushing or something is happening. But whatever it does, it seems to trick the car into thinking he’s got the legitimate keys.”

Seattle police say they don’t know exactly what kind of device thieves are using, or how it works. But they are worried.

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

Dahl says automakers need to do something to give people a little more security. But until that happens, he’s going to share this movie with as many neighbors as he can.

“I hope other people pay attention, make sure things are secure and locked, and don’t keep things in your car that are of any value.”

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

thirty two comments

Slam1263 (@IKnowBO)

It is just a random code transmitter.

They can transmit a million codes with the shove of a button.

Tow truck driver have been using them for over twenty years.

Don’t the receivers limit the number of failed attempts per 2nd?

Sadly No they don’t

Rodger Wolkins

They need to emit a cloud of pepper unload after three failed attempts.

Fresh Dude

Then cars in parking lots would permanently be admitting pepper sploog, in a parking lot hundreds of remote keys are used permanently, so it has to be able to see signals without assuming it is failed attempts. They need to increase the complexity of the codes, add more bits, make it too hard to crack.

ashford
lionfan

Can very likely take the entire damn car if it uses keyless ignition, right?

Testicules

For most cars, the thief would still have to deal with the mechanical steering lock that is released by the mechanical portion of the key.

As for some cars that now have keyless thrust button begin features… ?

clovellstc

The car permanently scans for the key. Since this is very likely just a device and sends out a bunch of signals in a row he wouldn’t know which one was for the car, so I doubt it would work on the ignition.

Phillip Coiner

I know how they are doing it. Have the cops send me an e-mail

john Bowler

See a classic Forrest Whitaker film “Ghost Dog”. The hero uses one of those code generators to steal luxury cars.

So, They may steal them from Tow Truck Drivers?

Tester

The device works by “pinging” the FOB on the key chain which, in turn, generates a signal to the vehicle. The device only works when the keys are within operational range of the vehicle.

Frank

This techbology isn’t fresh, over a decade old if anything. They demonstrated this in the movie, ‘Gone in sixty Seconds’.

Device is available on aliexpress from china for $600 or less. Clones key fobs and can transmit them. It’s not a mystery.

Thats not how they work. You need access to the original keys and the car to make a clone.

Most people keep their registration and garage door opener in their car. If a thief observes you leave your vehicle in a parking lot and can access your car this way, he can go to your home and rob it while you’re shopping or standing in the parking lot wondering where your car is.

Dan Darius

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

It’s a shame that cops are always reactive instead of proactive.

Dan Darius
Dee Ouchman

It’s a plain Tesla coil which energised the door lock/unlock servo.

Justa Joe

I don’t need a fresh car that badly. My two thousand five Ford Concentrate has manual (mechanical) doorlocks, manual (mitt crank) windows, and a 5-speed manual transmission. Its also carrying 275,000 miles on the odometer.

I’m in no fear of anyone attempting to steal my wheels.

Marc M

Yes, we have the exact same car – two thousand five Ford Concentrate. Looks like a ruddy ordnance vehicle, but I like it because it has NOTHING (except AC). Manual trans, windows, everything. And a freakin’ metal key. I do not like this fresh crap. “The more the over-think the plumbing, the lighter it is to stop up the drain,” in the words of Scotty. And every tour to the stealership to fix the over-thought under-engineered geek fucktoys is an exercise on your wallet.

This is accomplish rubbish. The rolling code protocol (keyloq) used by keyless entry will only permit two hundred fifty six code attempts before the original key will need to be reset. This is a hoax.

George Johnson

Evidently the cops are NOT one step ahead of the criminals.

Starheart

There are too many COPS that ARE the CRIMINALS OUT THERE.

pithypaul

The thief is going to sue for invasion of his own privacy, as nobody asked him for permission to use his pic. Hey, this is Amerika.

SMARTERTHANYOU

Wow.. these reporters, especially the police department, are frankly imbeciles! The technology is over a decade old, it’s called a laptop and a receiver.

Starheart

Homeland Security Personnel are using very advanced electronic technology to hack into everything now.

People like Kay Griggs, Michael Hastings, Phillip Marshall, Judi Bari and myself have been targeted by some of these these special ops Homeland Security personnel involved in criminal operations in the US. They have been promoting and rewarding war criminals for years from the CIA and Military Black Sites and Torment Facilities, into Homeland Security, FBI, Law Enforcement, and other government agencies across the country, to target citizens for surveillance and crimes.

(See Kay Griggs movies on you tube, as she gives her testimonial for what has been going on for a long time now.)

Since 2011, I’ve been targeted for surveillance burglaries, vandalism, pet torment, vehicle tampering as well as the planting of stolen and unknown origin property and malicious prosecution. My safe deposit box in, Colville, WA ,was even burglarized. I can’t find any organization to help me, out of the dozens and dozens of civil and constitutional rights organizations and attorneys I’ve contacted. I had to get a private investigator to trace license plates and find out who some of the people involved in these targeted black operations are.

I can’t get my FOIA Requests fulfilled for information on my surveillance “Watch List” targeted crimes and it’s even common skill in Washington state that Homeland Security personnel are involved in my targeted surveillance and gang stalking crimes. There has even been one out of court settlement in one case in the Seattle area for these criminal activities by Homeland Security Personnel.

My cruise control stopped working on my one hundred forty mile excursion back from Spokane WA, on Thursday February 26th (about two weeks ago), and I was gang stalked on the road by numerous vehicles (one of them with a Big Transformer Decal on the Back Window, one with a Big US “Infantry” sticker on his back window, as well as by WA license plate # WEPLAY2) and after they all turned off and I got past Colville, WA, I attempted my cruise control again and it commenced working. I know they have had remote control over my car alarms on my vehicles for a long time now, and it looks to me that they can also remote control my cruise control as well now……

They have been using FOIA DENIALS, FOIA APPEAL DENIALS, GAG ORDERS, NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS AND EVEN – “CLASSIFYING” INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COVER UP THEIR CRIMES AGAINST TARGETED INDIVIDUALS, ACTIVISTS AND JOURNALISTS.

Observe: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car, Q13 FOX News

Observe: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car

SEATTLE — A West Seattle man is sharing a surveillance movie that shows the scaring way thieves are using technology to break into cars.

Witness the movie as a man approaches Tom Dahl’s truck in this driveway. He attempts the treat, but the door is locked. So he takes off his backpack, moves it close to the window. Seconds later, he’s able to get inwards.

Photo Gallery

“He opens the door up,” says Dahl. “The lights went on, it was disarmed.”

Dahl is glad the thief didn’t take his truck. All he did was rummage through the contents of his glove compartment.

“I was brainy enough not to carry anything of value in there. That’s what he was looking for.”

But Dahl is worried about how the thief got in so lightly.

“You used to have a wire that you glided down the window, when it was mechanical. But now it’s electronic.”

Cases like this are becoming more common across the region.

Lars Carlson says the man who broke into his car in January also appeared to be carrying something in a backpack.

“It’s running through codes automatically or it’s a button they’re pushing or something is happening. But whatever it does, it seems to trick the car into thinking he’s got the legitimate keys.”

Seattle police say they don’t know exactly what kind of device thieves are using, or how it works. But they are worried.

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

Dahl says automakers need to do something to give people a little more security. But until that happens, he’s going to share this movie with as many neighbors as he can.

“I hope other people pay attention, make sure things are secure and locked, and don’t keep things in your car that are of any value.”

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

thirty two comments

Slam1263 (@IKnowBO)

It is just a random code transmitter.

They can transmit a million codes with the shove of a button.

Tow truck driver have been using them for over twenty years.

Don’t the receivers limit the number of failed attempts per 2nd?

Sadly No they don’t

Rodger Wolkins

They need to emit a cloud of pepper splatter after three failed attempts.

Fresh Dude

Then cars in parking lots would permanently be admitting pepper splatter, in a parking lot hundreds of remote keys are used permanently, so it has to be able to see signals without assuming it is failed attempts. They need to increase the complexity of the codes, add more bits, make it too hard to crack.

ashford
lionfan

Can most likely take the entire damn car if it uses keyless ignition, right?

Testicules

For most cars, the thief would still have to deal with the mechanical steering lock that is released by the mechanical portion of the key.

As for some cars that now have keyless thrust button begin features… ?

clovellstc

The car permanently scans for the key. Since this is very likely just a device and sends out a bunch of signals in a row he wouldn’t know which one was for the car, so I doubt it would work on the ignition.

Phillip Coiner

I know how they are doing it. Have the cops send me an e-mail

john Bowler

Witness a classic Forrest Whitaker film “Ghost Dog”. The hero uses one of those code generators to steal luxury cars.

So, They may steal them from Tow Truck Drivers?

Tester

The device works by “pinging” the FOB on the key chain which, in turn, generates a signal to the vehicle. The device only works when the keys are within operational range of the vehicle.

Frank

This techbology isn’t fresh, over a decade old if anything. They demonstrated this in the movie, ‘Gone in sixty Seconds’.

Device is available on aliexpress from china for $600 or less. Clones key fobs and can transmit them. It’s not a mystery.

Thats not how they work. You need access to the original keys and the car to make a clone.

Most people keep their registration and garage door opener in their car. If a thief sees you leave your vehicle in a parking lot and can access your car this way, he can go to your home and rob it while you’re shopping or standing in the parking lot wondering where your car is.

Dan Darius

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

It’s a shame that cops are always reactive instead of proactive.

Dan Darius
Dee Ouchman

It’s a plain Tesla coil which energised the door lock/unlock servo.

Justa Joe

I don’t need a fresh car that badly. My two thousand five Ford Concentrate has manual (mechanical) doorlocks, manual (arm crank) windows, and a 5-speed manual transmission. Its also carrying 275,000 miles on the odometer.

I’m in no fear of anyone attempting to steal my wheels.

Marc M

Yes, we have the exact same car – two thousand five Ford Concentrate. Looks like a ruddy ordnance vehicle, but I like it because it has NOTHING (except AC). Manual trans, windows, everything. And a freakin’ metal key. I do not like this fresh crap. “The more the over-think the plumbing, the lighter it is to stop up the drain,” in the words of Scotty. And every tour to the stealership to fix the over-thought under-engineered geek fucktoys is an exercise on your wallet.

This is accomplish rubbish. The rolling code protocol (keyloq) used by keyless entry will only permit two hundred fifty six code attempts before the original key will need to be reset. This is a hoax.

George Johnson

Evidently the cops are NOT one step ahead of the criminals.

Starheart

There are too many COPS that ARE the CRIMINALS OUT THERE.

pithypaul

The thief is going to sue for invasion of his own privacy, as nobody asked him for permission to use his pic. Hey, this is Amerika.

SMARTERTHANYOU

Wow.. these reporters, especially the police department, are frankly imbeciles! The technology is over a decade old, it’s called a laptop and a receiver.

Starheart

Homeland Security Personnel are using very advanced electronic technology to hack into everything now.

People like Kay Griggs, Michael Hastings, Phillip Marshall, Judi Bari and myself have been targeted by some of these these special ops Homeland Security personnel involved in criminal operations in the US. They have been promoting and rewarding war criminals for years from the CIA and Military Black Sites and Torment Facilities, into Homeland Security, FBI, Law Enforcement, and other government agencies across the country, to target citizens for surveillance and crimes.

(Observe Kay Griggs movies on you tube, as she gives her testimonial for what has been going on for a long time now.)

Since 2011, I’ve been targeted for surveillance burglaries, vandalism, pet torment, vehicle tampering as well as the planting of stolen and unknown origin property and malicious prosecution. My safe deposit box in, Colville, WA ,was even burglarized. I can’t find any organization to help me, out of the dozens and dozens of civil and constitutional rights organizations and attorneys I’ve contacted. I had to get a private investigator to trace license plates and find out who some of the people involved in these targeted black operations are.

I can’t get my FOIA Requests fulfilled for information on my surveillance “Watch List” targeted crimes and it’s even common skill in Washington state that Homeland Security personnel are involved in my targeted surveillance and gang stalking crimes. There has even been one out of court settlement in one case in the Seattle area for these criminal activities by Homeland Security Personnel.

My cruise control stopped working on my one hundred forty mile journey back from Spokane WA, on Thursday February 26th (about two weeks ago), and I was gang stalked on the road by numerous vehicles (one of them with a Big Transformer Decal on the Back Window, one with a Big US “Infantry” sticker on his back window, as well as by WA license plate # WEPLAY2) and after they all turned off and I got past Colville, WA, I attempted my cruise control again and it commenced working. I know they have had remote control over my car alarms on my vehicles for a long time now, and it looks to me that they can also remote control my cruise control as well now……

They have been using FOIA DENIALS, FOIA APPEAL DENIALS, GAG ORDERS, NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS AND EVEN – “CLASSIFYING” INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COVER UP THEIR CRIMES AGAINST TARGETED INDIVIDUALS, ACTIVISTS AND JOURNALISTS.

Observe: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car, Q13 FOX News

Observe: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car

SEATTLE — A West Seattle man is sharing a surveillance movie that shows the scaring way thieves are using technology to break into cars.

Witness the movie as a man approaches Tom Dahl’s truck in this driveway. He attempts the treat, but the door is locked. So he takes off his backpack, moves it close to the window. Seconds later, he’s able to get inwards.

Photo Gallery

“He opens the door up,” says Dahl. “The lights went on, it was disarmed.”

Dahl is glad the thief didn’t take his truck. All he did was rummage through the contents of his glove compartment.

“I was brainy enough not to carry anything of value in there. That’s what he was looking for.”

But Dahl is worried about how the thief got in so lightly.

“You used to have a wire that you glided down the window, when it was mechanical. But now it’s electronic.”

Cases like this are becoming more common across the region.

Lars Carlson says the man who broke into his car in January also appeared to be carrying something in a backpack.

“It’s running through codes automatically or it’s a button they’re pushing or something is happening. But whatever it does, it seems to trick the car into thinking he’s got the legitimate keys.”

Seattle police say they don’t know exactly what kind of device thieves are using, or how it works. But they are worried.

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

Dahl says automakers need to do something to give people a little more security. But until that happens, he’s going to share this movie with as many neighbors as he can.

“I hope other people pay attention, make sure things are secure and locked, and don’t keep things in your car that are of any value.”

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

thirty two comments

Slam1263 (@IKnowBO)

It is just a random code transmitter.

They can transmit a million codes with the thrust of a button.

Tow truck driver have been using them for over twenty years.

Don’t the receivers limit the number of failed attempts per 2nd?

Sadly No they don’t

Rodger Wolkins

They need to emit a cloud of pepper unload after three failed attempts.

Fresh Dude

Then cars in parking lots would permanently be admitting pepper unload, in a parking lot hundreds of remote keys are used permanently, so it has to be able to see signals without assuming it is failed attempts. They need to increase the complexity of the codes, add more bits, make it too hard to crack.

ashford
lionfan

Can very likely take the entire damn car if it uses keyless ignition, right?

Testicules

For most cars, the thief would still have to deal with the mechanical steering lock that is released by the mechanical portion of the key.

As for some cars that now have keyless shove button embark features… ?

clovellstc

The car permanently scans for the key. Since this is most likely just a device and sends out a bunch of signals in a row he wouldn’t know which one was for the car, so I doubt it would work on the ignition.

Phillip Coiner

I know how they are doing it. Have the cops send me an e-mail

john Bowler

Witness a classic Forrest Whitaker film “Ghost Dog”. The hero uses one of those code generators to steal luxury cars.

So, They may steal them from Tow Truck Drivers?

Tester

The device works by “pinging” the FOB on the key chain which, in turn, generates a signal to the vehicle. The device only works when the keys are within operational range of the vehicle.

Frank

This techbology isn’t fresh, over a decade old if anything. They demonstrated this in the movie, ‘Gone in sixty Seconds’.

Device is available on aliexpress from china for $600 or less. Clones key fobs and can transmit them. It’s not a mystery.

Thats not how they work. You need access to the original keys and the car to make a clone.

Most people keep their registration and garage door opener in their car. If a thief witnesses you leave your vehicle in a parking lot and can access your car this way, he can go to your home and rob it while you’re shopping or standing in the parking lot wondering where your car is.

Dan Darius

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

It’s a shame that cops are always reactive instead of proactive.

Dan Darius
Dee Ouchman

It’s a plain Tesla coil which energised the door lock/unlock servo.

Justa Joe

I don’t need a fresh car that badly. My two thousand five Ford Concentrate has manual (mechanical) doorlocks, manual (arm crank) windows, and a 5-speed manual transmission. Its also carrying 275,000 miles on the odometer.

I’m in no fear of anyone attempting to steal my wheels.

Marc M

Yes, we have the exact same car – two thousand five Ford Concentrate. Looks like a ruddy ordnance vehicle, but I like it because it has NOTHING (except AC). Manual trans, windows, everything. And a freakin’ metal key. I do not like this fresh crap. “The more the over-think the plumbing, the lighter it is to stop up the drain,” in the words of Scotty. And every tour to the stealership to fix the over-thought under-engineered geek fucktoys is an exercise on your wallet.

This is finish rubbish. The rolling code protocol (keyloq) used by keyless entry will only permit two hundred fifty six code attempts before the original key will need to be reset. This is a hoax.

George Johnson

Evidently the cops are NOT one step ahead of the criminals.

Starheart

There are too many COPS that ARE the CRIMINALS OUT THERE.

pithypaul

The thief is going to sue for invasion of his own privacy, as nobody asked him for permission to use his pic. Hey, this is Amerika.

SMARTERTHANYOU

Wow.. these reporters, especially the police department, are frankly imbeciles! The technology is over a decade old, it’s called a laptop and a receiver.

Starheart

Homeland Security Personnel are using very advanced electronic technology to hack into everything now.

People like Kay Griggs, Michael Hastings, Phillip Marshall, Judi Bari and myself have been targeted by some of these these special ops Homeland Security personnel involved in criminal operations in the US. They have been promoting and rewarding war criminals for years from the CIA and Military Black Sites and Torment Facilities, into Homeland Security, FBI, Law Enforcement, and other government agencies across the country, to target citizens for surveillance and crimes.

(See Kay Griggs movies on you tube, as she gives her testimonial for what has been going on for a long time now.)

Since 2011, I’ve been targeted for surveillance burglaries, vandalism, pet torment, vehicle tampering as well as the planting of stolen and unknown origin property and malicious prosecution. My safe deposit box in, Colville, WA ,was even burglarized. I can’t find any organization to help me, out of the dozens and dozens of civil and constitutional rights organizations and attorneys I’ve contacted. I had to get a private investigator to trace license plates and find out who some of the people involved in these targeted black operations are.

I can’t get my FOIA Requests fulfilled for information on my surveillance “Watch List” targeted crimes and it’s even common skill in Washington state that Homeland Security personnel are involved in my targeted surveillance and gang stalking crimes. There has even been one out of court settlement in one case in the Seattle area for these criminal activities by Homeland Security Personnel.

My cruise control stopped working on my one hundred forty mile journey back from Spokane WA, on Thursday February 26th (about two weeks ago), and I was gang stalked on the road by numerous vehicles (one of them with a Big Transformer Decal on the Back Window, one with a Big US “Infantry” sticker on his back window, as well as by WA license plate # WEPLAY2) and after they all turned off and I got past Colville, WA, I attempted my cruise control again and it began working. I know they have had remote control over my car alarms on my vehicles for a long time now, and it looks to me that they can also remote control my cruise control as well now……

They have been using FOIA DENIALS, FOIA APPEAL DENIALS, GAG ORDERS, NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS AND EVEN – “CLASSIFYING” INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COVER UP THEIR CRIMES AGAINST TARGETED INDIVIDUALS, ACTIVISTS AND JOURNALISTS.

Witness: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car, Q13 FOX News

Witness: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car

SEATTLE — A West Seattle man is sharing a surveillance movie that shows the panicking way thieves are using technology to break into cars.

Observe the movie as a man approaches Tom Dahl’s truck in this driveway. He attempts the treat, but the door is locked. So he takes off his backpack, moves it close to the window. Seconds later, he’s able to get inwards.

Photo Gallery

“He opens the door up,” says Dahl. “The lights went on, it was disarmed.”

Dahl is glad the thief didn’t take his truck. All he did was rummage through the contents of his glove compartment.

“I was wise enough not to carry anything of value in there. That’s what he was looking for.”

But Dahl is worried about how the thief got in so lightly.

“You used to have a wire that you glided down the window, when it was mechanical. But now it’s electronic.”

Cases like this are becoming more common across the region.

Lars Carlson says the man who broke into his car in January also appeared to be carrying something in a backpack.

“It’s running through codes automatically or it’s a button they’re pushing or something is happening. But whatever it does, it seems to trick the car into thinking he’s got the legitimate keys.”

Seattle police say they don’t know exactly what kind of device thieves are using, or how it works. But they are worried.

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

Dahl says automakers need to do something to give people a little more security. But until that happens, he’s going to share this movie with as many neighbors as he can.

“I hope other people pay attention, make sure things are secure and locked, and don’t keep things in your car that are of any value.”

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

thirty two comments

Slam1263 (@IKnowBO)

It is just a random code transmitter.

They can transmit a million codes with the thrust of a button.

Tow truck driver have been using them for over twenty years.

Don’t the receivers limit the number of failed attempts per 2nd?

Sadly No they don’t

Rodger Wolkins

They need to emit a cloud of pepper splash after three failed attempts.

Fresh Boy

Then cars in parking lots would permanently be admitting pepper unload, in a parking lot hundreds of remote keys are used permanently, so it has to be able to see signals without assuming it is failed attempts. They need to increase the complexity of the codes, add more bits, make it too hard to crack.

ashford
lionfan

Can very likely take the entire damn car if it uses keyless ignition, right?

Testicules

For most cars, the thief would still have to deal with the mechanical steering lock that is released by the mechanical portion of the key.

As for some cars that now have keyless thrust button embark features… ?

clovellstc

The car permanently scans for the key. Since this is very likely just a device and sends out a bunch of signals in a row he wouldn’t know which one was for the car, so I doubt it would work on the ignition.

Phillip Coiner

I know how they are doing it. Have the cops send me an e-mail

john Bowler

Observe a classic Forrest Whitaker film “Ghost Dog”. The hero uses one of those code generators to steal luxury cars.

So, They may steal them from Tow Truck Drivers?

Tester

The device works by “pinging” the FOB on the key chain which, in turn, generates a signal to the vehicle. The device only works when the keys are within operational range of the vehicle.

Frank

This techbology isn’t fresh, over a decade old if anything. They demonstrated this in the movie, ‘Gone in sixty Seconds’.

Device is available on aliexpress from china for $600 or less. Clones key fobs and can transmit them. It’s not a mystery.

Thats not how they work. You need access to the original keys and the car to make a clone.

Most people keep their registration and garage door opener in their car. If a thief sees you leave your vehicle in a parking lot and can access your car this way, he can go to your home and rob it while you’re shopping or standing in the parking lot wondering where your car is.

Dan Darius

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

It’s a shame that cops are always reactive instead of proactive.

Dan Darius
Dee Ouchman

It’s a ordinary Tesla coil which energised the door lock/unlock servo.

Justa Joe

I don’t need a fresh car that badly. My two thousand five Ford Concentrate has manual (mechanical) doorlocks, manual (arm crank) windows, and a 5-speed manual transmission. Its also carrying 275,000 miles on the odometer.

I’m in no fear of anyone attempting to steal my wheels.

Marc M

Yes, we have the exact same car – two thousand five Ford Concentrate. Looks like a ruddy ordnance vehicle, but I like it because it has NOTHING (except AC). Manual trans, windows, everything. And a freakin’ metal key. I do not like this fresh crap. “The more the over-think the plumbing, the lighter it is to stop up the drain,” in the words of Scotty. And every journey to the stealership to fix the over-thought under-engineered geek fucktoys is an exercise on your wallet.

This is accomplish rubbish. The rolling code protocol (keyloq) used by keyless entry will only permit two hundred fifty six code attempts before the original key will need to be reset. This is a hoax.

George Johnson

Evidently the cops are NOT one step ahead of the criminals.

Starheart

There are too many COPS that ARE the CRIMINALS OUT THERE.

pithypaul

The thief is going to sue for invasion of his own privacy, as nobody asked him for permission to use his photo. Hey, this is Amerika.

SMARTERTHANYOU

Wow.. these reporters, especially the police department, are frankly imbeciles! The technology is over a decade old, it’s called a laptop and a receiver.

Starheart

Homeland Security Personnel are using very advanced electronic technology to hack into everything now.

People like Kay Griggs, Michael Hastings, Phillip Marshall, Judi Bari and myself have been targeted by some of these these special ops Homeland Security personnel involved in criminal operations in the US. They have been promoting and rewarding war criminals for years from the CIA and Military Black Sites and Torment Facilities, into Homeland Security, FBI, Law Enforcement, and other government agencies across the country, to target citizens for surveillance and crimes.

(Observe Kay Griggs movies on you tube, as she gives her testimonial for what has been going on for a long time now.)

Since 2011, I’ve been targeted for surveillance burglaries, vandalism, pet torment, vehicle tampering as well as the planting of stolen and unknown origin property and malicious prosecution. My safe deposit box in, Colville, WA ,was even burglarized. I can’t find any organization to help me, out of the dozens and dozens of civil and constitutional rights organizations and attorneys I’ve contacted. I had to get a private investigator to trace license plates and find out who some of the people involved in these targeted black operations are.

I can’t get my FOIA Requests fulfilled for information on my surveillance “Watch List” targeted crimes and it’s even common skill in Washington state that Homeland Security personnel are involved in my targeted surveillance and gang stalking crimes. There has even been one out of court settlement in one case in the Seattle area for these criminal activities by Homeland Security Personnel.

My cruise control stopped working on my one hundred forty mile excursion back from Spokane WA, on Thursday February 26th (about two weeks ago), and I was gang stalked on the road by numerous vehicles (one of them with a Big Transformer Decal on the Back Window, one with a Big US “Infantry” sticker on his back window, as well as by WA license plate # WEPLAY2) and after they all turned off and I got past Colville, WA, I attempted my cruise control again and it commenced working. I know they have had remote control over my car alarms on my vehicles for a long time now, and it looks to me that they can also remote control my cruise control as well now……

They have been using FOIA DENIALS, FOIA APPEAL DENIALS, GAG ORDERS, NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS AND EVEN – “CLASSIFYING” INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COVER UP THEIR CRIMES AGAINST TARGETED INDIVIDUALS, ACTIVISTS AND JOURNALISTS.

Witness: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car, Q13 FOX News

Witness: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car

SEATTLE — A West Seattle man is sharing a surveillance movie that shows the panicking way thieves are using technology to break into cars.

Observe the movie as a man approaches Tom Dahl’s truck in this driveway. He attempts the treat, but the door is locked. So he takes off his backpack, moves it close to the window. Seconds later, he’s able to get inwards.

Photo Gallery

“He opens the door up,” says Dahl. “The lights went on, it was disarmed.”

Dahl is glad the thief didn’t take his truck. All he did was rummage through the contents of his glove compartment.

“I was clever enough not to carry anything of value in there. That’s what he was looking for.”

But Dahl is worried about how the thief got in so lightly.

“You used to have a wire that you slipped down the window, when it was mechanical. But now it’s electronic.”

Cases like this are becoming more common across the region.

Lars Carlson says the man who broke into his car in January also appeared to be carrying something in a backpack.

“It’s running through codes automatically or it’s a button they’re pushing or something is happening. But whatever it does, it seems to trick the car into thinking he’s got the legitimate keys.”

Seattle police say they don’t know exactly what kind of device thieves are using, or how it works. But they are worried.

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

Dahl says automakers need to do something to give people a little more security. But until that happens, he’s going to share this movie with as many neighbors as he can.

“I hope other people pay attention, make sure things are secure and locked, and don’t keep things in your car that are of any value.”

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

thirty two comments

Slam1263 (@IKnowBO)

It is just a random code transmitter.

They can transmit a million codes with the thrust of a button.

Tow truck driver have been using them for over twenty years.

Don’t the receivers limit the number of failed attempts per 2nd?

Sadly No they don’t

Rodger Wolkins

They need to emit a cloud of pepper drizzle after three failed attempts.

Fresh Boy

Then cars in parking lots would permanently be admitting pepper drizzle, in a parking lot hundreds of remote keys are used permanently, so it has to be able to see signals without assuming it is failed attempts. They need to increase the complexity of the codes, add more bits, make it too hard to crack.

ashford
lionfan

Can most likely take the entire damn car if it uses keyless ignition, right?

Testicules

For most cars, the thief would still have to deal with the mechanical steering lock that is released by the mechanical portion of the key.

As for some cars that now have keyless thrust button embark features… ?

clovellstc

The car permanently scans for the key. Since this is very likely just a device and sends out a bunch of signals in a row he wouldn’t know which one was for the car, so I doubt it would work on the ignition.

Phillip Coiner

I know how they are doing it. Have the cops send me an e-mail

john Bowler

Observe a classic Forrest Whitaker film “Ghost Dog”. The hero uses one of those code generators to steal luxury cars.

So, They may steal them from Tow Truck Drivers?

Tester

The device works by “pinging” the FOB on the key chain which, in turn, generates a signal to the vehicle. The device only works when the keys are within operational range of the vehicle.

Frank

This techbology isn’t fresh, over a decade old if anything. They demonstrated this in the movie, ‘Gone in sixty Seconds’.

Device is available on aliexpress from china for $600 or less. Clones key fobs and can transmit them. It’s not a mystery.

Thats not how they work. You need access to the original keys and the car to make a clone.

Most people keep their registration and garage door opener in their car. If a thief witnesses you leave your vehicle in a parking lot and can access your car this way, he can go to your home and rob it while you’re shopping or standing in the parking lot wondering where your car is.

Dan Darius

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

It’s a shame that cops are always reactive instead of proactive.

Dan Darius
Dee Ouchman

It’s a elementary Tesla coil which energised the door lock/unlock servo.

Justa Joe

I don’t need a fresh car that badly. My two thousand five Ford Concentrate has manual (mechanical) doorlocks, manual (forearm crank) windows, and a 5-speed manual transmission. Its also carrying 275,000 miles on the odometer.

I’m in no fear of anyone attempting to steal my wheels.

Marc M

Yes, we have the exact same car – two thousand five Ford Concentrate. Looks like a ruddy ordnance vehicle, but I like it because it has NOTHING (except AC). Manual trans, windows, everything. And a freakin’ metal key. I do not like this fresh crap. “The more the over-think the plumbing, the lighter it is to stop up the drain,” in the words of Scotty. And every tour to the stealership to fix the over-thought under-engineered geek fucktoys is an exercise on your wallet.

This is finish rubbish. The rolling code protocol (keyloq) used by keyless entry will only permit two hundred fifty six code attempts before the original key will need to be reset. This is a hoax.

George Johnson

Evidently the cops are NOT one step ahead of the criminals.

Starheart

There are too many COPS that ARE the CRIMINALS OUT THERE.

pithypaul

The thief is going to sue for invasion of his own privacy, as nobody asked him for permission to use his picture. Hey, this is Amerika.

SMARTERTHANYOU

Wow.. these reporters, especially the police department, are frankly imbeciles! The technology is over a decade old, it’s called a laptop and a receiver.

Starheart

Homeland Security Personnel are using very advanced electronic technology to hack into everything now.

People like Kay Griggs, Michael Hastings, Phillip Marshall, Judi Bari and myself have been targeted by some of these these special ops Homeland Security personnel involved in criminal operations in the US. They have been promoting and rewarding war criminals for years from the CIA and Military Black Sites and Torment Facilities, into Homeland Security, FBI, Law Enforcement, and other government agencies across the country, to target citizens for surveillance and crimes.

(Observe Kay Griggs movies on you tube, as she gives her testimonial for what has been going on for a long time now.)

Since 2011, I’ve been targeted for surveillance burglaries, vandalism, pet torment, vehicle tampering as well as the planting of stolen and unknown origin property and malicious prosecution. My safe deposit box in, Colville, WA ,was even burglarized. I can’t find any organization to help me, out of the dozens and dozens of civil and constitutional rights organizations and attorneys I’ve contacted. I had to get a private investigator to trace license plates and find out who some of the people involved in these targeted black operations are.

I can’t get my FOIA Requests fulfilled for information on my surveillance “Watch List” targeted crimes and it’s even common skill in Washington state that Homeland Security personnel are involved in my targeted surveillance and gang stalking crimes. There has even been one out of court settlement in one case in the Seattle area for these criminal activities by Homeland Security Personnel.

My cruise control stopped working on my one hundred forty mile tour back from Spokane WA, on Thursday February 26th (about two weeks ago), and I was gang stalked on the road by numerous vehicles (one of them with a Big Transformer Decal on the Back Window, one with a Big US “Infantry” sticker on his back window, as well as by WA license plate # WEPLAY2) and after they all turned off and I got past Colville, WA, I attempted my cruise control again and it embarked working. I know they have had remote control over my car alarms on my vehicles for a long time now, and it looks to me that they can also remote control my cruise control as well now……

They have been using FOIA DENIALS, FOIA APPEAL DENIALS, GAG ORDERS, NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS AND EVEN – “CLASSIFYING” INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COVER UP THEIR CRIMES AGAINST TARGETED INDIVIDUALS, ACTIVISTS AND JOURNALISTS.

Witness: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car, Q13 FOX News

See: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car

SEATTLE — A West Seattle man is sharing a surveillance movie that shows the panicking way thieves are using technology to break into cars.

Observe the movie as a man approaches Tom Dahl’s truck in this driveway. He attempts the treat, but the door is locked. So he takes off his backpack, moves it close to the window. Seconds later, he’s able to get inwards.

Photo Gallery

“He opens the door up,” says Dahl. “The lights went on, it was disarmed.”

Dahl is glad the thief didn’t take his truck. All he did was rummage through the contents of his glove compartment.

“I was clever enough not to carry anything of value in there. That’s what he was looking for.”

But Dahl is worried about how the thief got in so lightly.

“You used to have a wire that you glided down the window, when it was mechanical. But now it’s electronic.”

Cases like this are becoming more common across the region.

Lars Carlson says the man who broke into his car in January also appeared to be carrying something in a backpack.

“It’s running through codes automatically or it’s a button they’re pushing or something is happening. But whatever it does, it seems to trick the car into thinking he’s got the legitimate keys.”

Seattle police say they don’t know exactly what kind of device thieves are using, or how it works. But they are worried.

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

Dahl says automakers need to do something to give people a little more security. But until that happens, he’s going to share this movie with as many neighbors as he can.

“I hope other people pay attention, make sure things are secure and locked, and don’t keep things in your car that are of any value.”

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

thirty two comments

Slam1263 (@IKnowBO)

It is just a random code transmitter.

They can transmit a million codes with the thrust of a button.

Tow truck driver have been using them for over twenty years.

Don’t the receivers limit the number of failed attempts per 2nd?

Sadly No they don’t

Rodger Wolkins

They need to emit a cloud of pepper squirt after three failed attempts.

Fresh Dude

Then cars in parking lots would permanently be admitting pepper burst, in a parking lot hundreds of remote keys are used permanently, so it has to be able to see signals without assuming it is failed attempts. They need to increase the complexity of the codes, add more bits, make it too hard to crack.

ashford
lionfan

Can very likely take the entire damn car if it uses keyless ignition, right?

Testicules

For most cars, the thief would still have to deal with the mechanical steering lock that is released by the mechanical portion of the key.

As for some cars that now have keyless thrust button begin features… ?

clovellstc

The car permanently scans for the key. Since this is most likely just a device and sends out a bunch of signals in a row he wouldn’t know which one was for the car, so I doubt it would work on the ignition.

Phillip Coiner

I know how they are doing it. Have the cops send me an e-mail

john Bowler

Witness a classic Forrest Whitaker film “Ghost Dog”. The hero uses one of those code generators to steal luxury cars.

So, They may steal them from Tow Truck Drivers?

Tester

The device works by “pinging” the FOB on the key chain which, in turn, generates a signal to the vehicle. The device only works when the keys are within operational range of the vehicle.

Frank

This techbology isn’t fresh, over a decade old if anything. They demonstrated this in the movie, ‘Gone in sixty Seconds’.

Device is available on aliexpress from china for $600 or less. Clones key fobs and can transmit them. It’s not a mystery.

Thats not how they work. You need access to the original keys and the car to make a clone.

Most people keep their registration and garage door opener in their car. If a thief sees you leave your vehicle in a parking lot and can access your car this way, he can go to your home and rob it while you’re shopping or standing in the parking lot wondering where your car is.

Dan Darius

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

It’s a shame that cops are always reactive instead of proactive.

Dan Darius
Dee Ouchman

It’s a elementary Tesla coil which energised the door lock/unlock servo.

Justa Joe

I don’t need a fresh car that badly. My two thousand five Ford Concentrate has manual (mechanical) doorlocks, manual (mitt crank) windows, and a 5-speed manual transmission. Its also carrying 275,000 miles on the odometer.

I’m in no fear of anyone attempting to steal my wheels.

Marc M

Yes, we have the exact same car – two thousand five Ford Concentrate. Looks like a ruddy ordnance vehicle, but I like it because it has NOTHING (except AC). Manual trans, windows, everything. And a freakin’ metal key. I do not like this fresh crap. “The more the over-think the plumbing, the lighter it is to stop up the drain,” in the words of Scotty. And every journey to the stealership to fix the over-thought under-engineered geek fucktoys is an exercise on your wallet.

This is accomplish rubbish. The rolling code protocol (keyloq) used by keyless entry will only permit two hundred fifty six code attempts before the original key will need to be reset. This is a hoax.

George Johnson

Evidently the cops are NOT one step ahead of the criminals.

Starheart

There are too many COPS that ARE the CRIMINALS OUT THERE.

pithypaul

The thief is going to sue for invasion of his own privacy, as nobody asked him for permission to use his picture. Hey, this is Amerika.

SMARTERTHANYOU

Wow.. these reporters, especially the police department, are frankly imbeciles! The technology is over a decade old, it’s called a laptop and a receiver.

Starheart

Homeland Security Personnel are using very advanced electronic technology to hack into everything now.

People like Kay Griggs, Michael Hastings, Phillip Marshall, Judi Bari and myself have been targeted by some of these these special ops Homeland Security personnel involved in criminal operations in the US. They have been promoting and rewarding war criminals for years from the CIA and Military Black Sites and Torment Facilities, into Homeland Security, FBI, Law Enforcement, and other government agencies across the country, to target citizens for surveillance and crimes.

(Observe Kay Griggs movies on you tube, as she gives her testimonial for what has been going on for a long time now.)

Since 2011, I’ve been targeted for surveillance burglaries, vandalism, pet torment, vehicle tampering as well as the planting of stolen and unknown origin property and malicious prosecution. My safe deposit box in, Colville, WA ,was even burglarized. I can’t find any organization to help me, out of the dozens and dozens of civil and constitutional rights organizations and attorneys I’ve contacted. I had to get a private investigator to trace license plates and find out who some of the people involved in these targeted black operations are.

I can’t get my FOIA Requests fulfilled for information on my surveillance “Watch List” targeted crimes and it’s even common skill in Washington state that Homeland Security personnel are involved in my targeted surveillance and gang stalking crimes. There has even been one out of court settlement in one case in the Seattle area for these criminal activities by Homeland Security Personnel.

My cruise control stopped working on my one hundred forty mile excursion back from Spokane WA, on Thursday February 26th (about two weeks ago), and I was gang stalked on the road by numerous vehicles (one of them with a Big Transformer Decal on the Back Window, one with a Big US “Infantry” sticker on his back window, as well as by WA license plate # WEPLAY2) and after they all turned off and I got past Colville, WA, I attempted my cruise control again and it commenced working. I know they have had remote control over my car alarms on my vehicles for a long time now, and it looks to me that they can also remote control my cruise control as well now……

They have been using FOIA DENIALS, FOIA APPEAL DENIALS, GAG ORDERS, NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS AND EVEN – “CLASSIFYING” INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COVER UP THEIR CRIMES AGAINST TARGETED INDIVIDUALS, ACTIVISTS AND JOURNALISTS.

Observe: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car, Q13 FOX News

See: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car

SEATTLE — A West Seattle man is sharing a surveillance movie that shows the panicking way thieves are using technology to break into cars.

Witness the movie as a man approaches Tom Dahl’s truck in this driveway. He attempts the treat, but the door is locked. So he takes off his backpack, moves it close to the window. Seconds later, he’s able to get inwards.

Photo Gallery

“He opens the door up,” says Dahl. “The lights went on, it was disarmed.”

Dahl is glad the thief didn’t take his truck. All he did was rummage through the contents of his glove compartment.

“I was wise enough not to carry anything of value in there. That’s what he was looking for.”

But Dahl is worried about how the thief got in so lightly.

“You used to have a wire that you glided down the window, when it was mechanical. But now it’s electronic.”

Cases like this are becoming more common across the region.

Lars Carlson says the man who broke into his car in January also appeared to be carrying something in a backpack.

“It’s running through codes automatically or it’s a button they’re pushing or something is happening. But whatever it does, it seems to trick the car into thinking he’s got the legitimate keys.”

Seattle police say they don’t know exactly what kind of device thieves are using, or how it works. But they are worried.

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

Dahl says automakers need to do something to give people a little more security. But until that happens, he’s going to share this movie with as many neighbors as he can.

“I hope other people pay attention, make sure things are secure and locked, and don’t keep things in your car that are of any value.”

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

thirty two comments

Slam1263 (@IKnowBO)

It is just a random code transmitter.

They can transmit a million codes with the thrust of a button.

Tow truck driver have been using them for over twenty years.

Don’t the receivers limit the number of failed attempts per 2nd?

Sadly No they don’t

Rodger Wolkins

They need to emit a cloud of pepper unload after three failed attempts.

Fresh Fellow

Then cars in parking lots would permanently be admitting pepper squirt, in a parking lot hundreds of remote keys are used permanently, so it has to be able to see signals without assuming it is failed attempts. They need to increase the complexity of the codes, add more bits, make it too hard to crack.

ashford
lionfan

Can most likely take the entire damn car if it uses keyless ignition, right?

Testicules

For most cars, the thief would still have to deal with the mechanical steering lock that is released by the mechanical portion of the key.

As for some cars that now have keyless shove button commence features… ?

clovellstc

The car permanently scans for the key. Since this is most likely just a device and sends out a bunch of signals in a row he wouldn’t know which one was for the car, so I doubt it would work on the ignition.

Phillip Coiner

I know how they are doing it. Have the cops send me an e-mail

john Bowler

Observe a classic Forrest Whitaker film “Ghost Dog”. The hero uses one of those code generators to steal luxury cars.

So, They may steal them from Tow Truck Drivers?

Tester

The device works by “pinging” the FOB on the key chain which, in turn, generates a signal to the vehicle. The device only works when the keys are within operational range of the vehicle.

Frank

This techbology isn’t fresh, over a decade old if anything. They demonstrated this in the movie, ‘Gone in sixty Seconds’.

Device is available on aliexpress from china for $600 or less. Clones key fobs and can transmit them. It’s not a mystery.

Thats not how they work. You need access to the original keys and the car to make a clone.

Most people keep their registration and garage door opener in their car. If a thief sees you leave your vehicle in a parking lot and can access your car this way, he can go to your home and rob it while you’re shopping or standing in the parking lot wondering where your car is.

Dan Darius

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

It’s a shame that cops are always reactive instead of proactive.

Dan Darius
Dee Ouchman

It’s a elementary Tesla coil which energised the door lock/unlock servo.

Justa Joe

I don’t need a fresh car that badly. My two thousand five Ford Concentrate has manual (mechanical) doorlocks, manual (arm crank) windows, and a 5-speed manual transmission. Its also carrying 275,000 miles on the odometer.

I’m in no fear of anyone attempting to steal my wheels.

Marc M

Yes, we have the exact same car – two thousand five Ford Concentrate. Looks like a ruddy ordnance vehicle, but I like it because it has NOTHING (except AC). Manual trans, windows, everything. And a freakin’ metal key. I do not like this fresh crap. “The more the over-think the plumbing, the lighter it is to stop up the drain,” in the words of Scotty. And every tour to the stealership to fix the over-thought under-engineered geek fucktoys is an exercise on your wallet.

This is finish rubbish. The rolling code protocol (keyloq) used by keyless entry will only permit two hundred fifty six code attempts before the original key will need to be reset. This is a hoax.

George Johnson

Evidently the cops are NOT one step ahead of the criminals.

Starheart

There are too many COPS that ARE the CRIMINALS OUT THERE.

pithypaul

The thief is going to sue for invasion of his own privacy, as nobody asked him for permission to use his picture. Hey, this is Amerika.

SMARTERTHANYOU

Wow.. these reporters, especially the police department, are frankly imbeciles! The technology is over a decade old, it’s called a laptop and a receiver.

Starheart

Homeland Security Personnel are using very advanced electronic technology to hack into everything now.

People like Kay Griggs, Michael Hastings, Phillip Marshall, Judi Bari and myself have been targeted by some of these these special ops Homeland Security personnel involved in criminal operations in the US. They have been promoting and rewarding war criminals for years from the CIA and Military Black Sites and Torment Facilities, into Homeland Security, FBI, Law Enforcement, and other government agencies across the country, to target citizens for surveillance and crimes.

(Observe Kay Griggs movies on you tube, as she gives her testimonial for what has been going on for a long time now.)

Since 2011, I’ve been targeted for surveillance burglaries, vandalism, pet torment, vehicle tampering as well as the planting of stolen and unknown origin property and malicious prosecution. My safe deposit box in, Colville, WA ,was even burglarized. I can’t find any organization to help me, out of the dozens and dozens of civil and constitutional rights organizations and attorneys I’ve contacted. I had to get a private investigator to trace license plates and find out who some of the people involved in these targeted black operations are.

I can’t get my FOIA Requests fulfilled for information on my surveillance “Watch List” targeted crimes and it’s even common skill in Washington state that Homeland Security personnel are involved in my targeted surveillance and gang stalking crimes. There has even been one out of court settlement in one case in the Seattle area for these criminal activities by Homeland Security Personnel.

My cruise control stopped working on my one hundred forty mile journey back from Spokane WA, on Thursday February 26th (about two weeks ago), and I was gang stalked on the road by numerous vehicles (one of them with a Big Transformer Decal on the Back Window, one with a Big US “Infantry” sticker on his back window, as well as by WA license plate # WEPLAY2) and after they all turned off and I got past Colville, WA, I attempted my cruise control again and it embarked working. I know they have had remote control over my car alarms on my vehicles for a long time now, and it looks to me that they can also remote control my cruise control as well now……

They have been using FOIA DENIALS, FOIA APPEAL DENIALS, GAG ORDERS, NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS AND EVEN – “CLASSIFYING” INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COVER UP THEIR CRIMES AGAINST TARGETED INDIVIDUALS, ACTIVISTS AND JOURNALISTS.

See: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car, Q13 FOX News

Witness: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car

SEATTLE — A West Seattle man is sharing a surveillance movie that shows the panicking way thieves are using technology to break into cars.

Observe the movie as a man approaches Tom Dahl’s truck in this driveway. He attempts the treat, but the door is locked. So he takes off his backpack, moves it close to the window. Seconds later, he’s able to get inwards.

Photo Gallery

“He opens the door up,” says Dahl. “The lights went on, it was disarmed.”

Dahl is glad the thief didn’t take his truck. All he did was rummage through the contents of his glove compartment.

“I was wise enough not to carry anything of value in there. That’s what he was looking for.”

But Dahl is worried about how the thief got in so lightly.

“You used to have a wire that you glided down the window, when it was mechanical. But now it’s electronic.”

Cases like this are becoming more common across the region.

Lars Carlson says the man who broke into his car in January also appeared to be carrying something in a backpack.

“It’s running through codes automatically or it’s a button they’re pushing or something is happening. But whatever it does, it seems to trick the car into thinking he’s got the legitimate keys.”

Seattle police say they don’t know exactly what kind of device thieves are using, or how it works. But they are worried.

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

Dahl says automakers need to do something to give people a little more security. But until that happens, he’s going to share this movie with as many neighbors as he can.

“I hope other people pay attention, make sure things are secure and locked, and don’t keep things in your car that are of any value.”

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

thirty two comments

Slam1263 (@IKnowBO)

It is just a random code transmitter.

They can transmit a million codes with the thrust of a button.

Tow truck driver have been using them for over twenty years.

Don’t the receivers limit the number of failed attempts per 2nd?

Sadly No they don’t

Rodger Wolkins

They need to emit a cloud of pepper bust after three failed attempts.

Fresh Boy

Then cars in parking lots would permanently be admitting pepper squirt, in a parking lot hundreds of remote keys are used permanently, so it has to be able to see signals without assuming it is failed attempts. They need to increase the complexity of the codes, add more bits, make it too hard to crack.

ashford
lionfan

Can very likely take the entire damn car if it uses keyless ignition, right?

Testicules

For most cars, the thief would still have to deal with the mechanical steering lock that is released by the mechanical portion of the key.

As for some cars that now have keyless shove button begin features… ?

clovellstc

The car permanently scans for the key. Since this is most likely just a device and sends out a bunch of signals in a row he wouldn’t know which one was for the car, so I doubt it would work on the ignition.

Phillip Coiner

I know how they are doing it. Have the cops send me an e-mail

john Bowler

Observe a classic Forrest Whitaker film “Ghost Dog”. The hero uses one of those code generators to steal luxury cars.

So, They may steal them from Tow Truck Drivers?

Tester

The device works by “pinging” the FOB on the key chain which, in turn, generates a signal to the vehicle. The device only works when the keys are within operational range of the vehicle.

Frank

This techbology isn’t fresh, over a decade old if anything. They demonstrated this in the movie, ‘Gone in sixty Seconds’.

Device is available on aliexpress from china for $600 or less. Clones key fobs and can transmit them. It’s not a mystery.

Thats not how they work. You need access to the original keys and the car to make a clone.

Most people keep their registration and garage door opener in their car. If a thief observes you leave your vehicle in a parking lot and can access your car this way, he can go to your home and rob it while you’re shopping or standing in the parking lot wondering where your car is.

Dan Darius

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

It’s a shame that cops are always reactive instead of proactive.

Dan Darius
Dee Ouchman

It’s a elementary Tesla coil which energised the door lock/unlock servo.

Justa Joe

I don’t need a fresh car that badly. My two thousand five Ford Concentrate has manual (mechanical) doorlocks, manual (arm crank) windows, and a 5-speed manual transmission. Its also carrying 275,000 miles on the odometer.

I’m in no fear of anyone attempting to steal my wheels.

Marc M

Yes, we have the exact same car – two thousand five Ford Concentrate. Looks like a ruddy ordnance vehicle, but I like it because it has NOTHING (except AC). Manual trans, windows, everything. And a freakin’ metal key. I do not like this fresh crap. “The more the over-think the plumbing, the lighter it is to stop up the drain,” in the words of Scotty. And every tour to the stealership to fix the over-thought under-engineered geek fucktoys is an exercise on your wallet.

This is accomplish rubbish. The rolling code protocol (keyloq) used by keyless entry will only permit two hundred fifty six code attempts before the original key will need to be reset. This is a hoax.

George Johnson

Evidently the cops are NOT one step ahead of the criminals.

Starheart

There are too many COPS that ARE the CRIMINALS OUT THERE.

pithypaul

The thief is going to sue for invasion of his own privacy, as nobody asked him for permission to use his pic. Hey, this is Amerika.

SMARTERTHANYOU

Wow.. these reporters, especially the police department, are frankly imbeciles! The technology is over a decade old, it’s called a laptop and a receiver.

Starheart

Homeland Security Personnel are using very advanced electronic technology to hack into everything now.

People like Kay Griggs, Michael Hastings, Phillip Marshall, Judi Bari and myself have been targeted by some of these these special ops Homeland Security personnel involved in criminal operations in the US. They have been promoting and rewarding war criminals for years from the CIA and Military Black Sites and Torment Facilities, into Homeland Security, FBI, Law Enforcement, and other government agencies across the country, to target citizens for surveillance and crimes.

(Witness Kay Griggs movies on you tube, as she gives her testimonial for what has been going on for a long time now.)

Since 2011, I’ve been targeted for surveillance burglaries, vandalism, pet torment, vehicle tampering as well as the planting of stolen and unknown origin property and malicious prosecution. My safe deposit box in, Colville, WA ,was even burglarized. I can’t find any organization to help me, out of the dozens and dozens of civil and constitutional rights organizations and attorneys I’ve contacted. I had to get a private investigator to trace license plates and find out who some of the people involved in these targeted black operations are.

I can’t get my FOIA Requests fulfilled for information on my surveillance “Watch List” targeted crimes and it’s even common skill in Washington state that Homeland Security personnel are involved in my targeted surveillance and gang stalking crimes. There has even been one out of court settlement in one case in the Seattle area for these criminal activities by Homeland Security Personnel.

My cruise control stopped working on my one hundred forty mile journey back from Spokane WA, on Thursday February 26th (about two weeks ago), and I was gang stalked on the road by numerous vehicles (one of them with a Big Transformer Decal on the Back Window, one with a Big US “Infantry” sticker on his back window, as well as by WA license plate # WEPLAY2) and after they all turned off and I got past Colville, WA, I attempted my cruise control again and it commenced working. I know they have had remote control over my car alarms on my vehicles for a long time now, and it looks to me that they can also remote control my cruise control as well now……

They have been using FOIA DENIALS, FOIA APPEAL DENIALS, GAG ORDERS, NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS AND EVEN – “CLASSIFYING” INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COVER UP THEIR CRIMES AGAINST TARGETED INDIVIDUALS, ACTIVISTS AND JOURNALISTS.

Observe: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car, Q13 FOX News

Observe: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car

SEATTLE — A West Seattle man is sharing a surveillance movie that shows the scaring way thieves are using technology to break into cars.

Witness the movie as a man approaches Tom Dahl’s truck in this driveway. He attempts the treat, but the door is locked. So he takes off his backpack, moves it close to the window. Seconds later, he’s able to get inwards.

Photo Gallery

“He opens the door up,” says Dahl. “The lights went on, it was disarmed.”

Dahl is glad the thief didn’t take his truck. All he did was rummage through the contents of his glove compartment.

“I was brainy enough not to carry anything of value in there. That’s what he was looking for.”

But Dahl is worried about how the thief got in so lightly.

“You used to have a wire that you slipped down the window, when it was mechanical. But now it’s electronic.”

Cases like this are becoming more common across the region.

Lars Carlson says the man who broke into his car in January also appeared to be carrying something in a backpack.

“It’s running through codes automatically or it’s a button they’re pushing or something is happening. But whatever it does, it seems to trick the car into thinking he’s got the legitimate keys.”

Seattle police say they don’t know exactly what kind of device thieves are using, or how it works. But they are worried.

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

Dahl says automakers need to do something to give people a little more security. But until that happens, he’s going to share this movie with as many neighbors as he can.

“I hope other people pay attention, make sure things are secure and locked, and don’t keep things in your car that are of any value.”

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

thirty two comments

Slam1263 (@IKnowBO)

It is just a random code transmitter.

They can transmit a million codes with the thrust of a button.

Tow truck driver have been using them for over twenty years.

Don’t the receivers limit the number of failed attempts per 2nd?

Sadly No they don’t

Rodger Wolkins

They need to emit a cloud of pepper burst after three failed attempts.

Fresh Stud

Then cars in parking lots would permanently be admitting pepper dump, in a parking lot hundreds of remote keys are used permanently, so it has to be able to see signals without assuming it is failed attempts. They need to increase the complexity of the codes, add more bits, make it too hard to crack.

ashford
lionfan

Can very likely take the entire damn car if it uses keyless ignition, right?

Testicules

For most cars, the thief would still have to deal with the mechanical steering lock that is released by the mechanical portion of the key.

As for some cars that now have keyless shove button commence features… ?

clovellstc

The car permanently scans for the key. Since this is most likely just a device and sends out a bunch of signals in a row he wouldn’t know which one was for the car, so I doubt it would work on the ignition.

Phillip Coiner

I know how they are doing it. Have the cops send me an e-mail

john Bowler

See a classic Forrest Whitaker film “Ghost Dog”. The hero uses one of those code generators to steal luxury cars.

So, They may steal them from Tow Truck Drivers?

Tester

The device works by “pinging” the FOB on the key chain which, in turn, generates a signal to the vehicle. The device only works when the keys are within operational range of the vehicle.

Frank

This techbology isn’t fresh, over a decade old if anything. They demonstrated this in the movie, ‘Gone in sixty Seconds’.

Device is available on aliexpress from china for $600 or less. Clones key fobs and can transmit them. It’s not a mystery.

Thats not how they work. You need access to the original keys and the car to make a clone.

Most people keep their registration and garage door opener in their car. If a thief sees you leave your vehicle in a parking lot and can access your car this way, he can go to your home and rob it while you’re shopping or standing in the parking lot wondering where your car is.

Dan Darius

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

It’s a shame that cops are always reactive instead of proactive.

Dan Darius
Dee Ouchman

It’s a elementary Tesla coil which energised the door lock/unlock servo.

Justa Joe

I don’t need a fresh car that badly. My two thousand five Ford Concentrate has manual (mechanical) doorlocks, manual (forearm crank) windows, and a 5-speed manual transmission. Its also carrying 275,000 miles on the odometer.

I’m in no fear of anyone attempting to steal my wheels.

Marc M

Yes, we have the exact same car – two thousand five Ford Concentrate. Looks like a ruddy ordnance vehicle, but I like it because it has NOTHING (except AC). Manual trans, windows, everything. And a freakin’ metal key. I do not like this fresh crap. “The more the over-think the plumbing, the lighter it is to stop up the drain,” in the words of Scotty. And every journey to the stealership to fix the over-thought under-engineered geek fucktoys is an exercise on your wallet.

This is accomplish rubbish. The rolling code protocol (keyloq) used by keyless entry will only permit two hundred fifty six code attempts before the original key will need to be reset. This is a hoax.

George Johnson

Evidently the cops are NOT one step ahead of the criminals.

Starheart

There are too many COPS that ARE the CRIMINALS OUT THERE.

pithypaul

The thief is going to sue for invasion of his own privacy, as nobody asked him for permission to use his pic. Hey, this is Amerika.

SMARTERTHANYOU

Wow.. these reporters, especially the police department, are frankly imbeciles! The technology is over a decade old, it’s called a laptop and a receiver.

Starheart

Homeland Security Personnel are using very advanced electronic technology to hack into everything now.

People like Kay Griggs, Michael Hastings, Phillip Marshall, Judi Bari and myself have been targeted by some of these these special ops Homeland Security personnel involved in criminal operations in the US. They have been promoting and rewarding war criminals for years from the CIA and Military Black Sites and Torment Facilities, into Homeland Security, FBI, Law Enforcement, and other government agencies across the country, to target citizens for surveillance and crimes.

(Witness Kay Griggs movies on you tube, as she gives her testimonial for what has been going on for a long time now.)

Since 2011, I’ve been targeted for surveillance burglaries, vandalism, pet torment, vehicle tampering as well as the planting of stolen and unknown origin property and malicious prosecution. My safe deposit box in, Colville, WA ,was even burglarized. I can’t find any organization to help me, out of the dozens and dozens of civil and constitutional rights organizations and attorneys I’ve contacted. I had to get a private investigator to trace license plates and find out who some of the people involved in these targeted black operations are.

I can’t get my FOIA Requests fulfilled for information on my surveillance “Watch List” targeted crimes and it’s even common skill in Washington state that Homeland Security personnel are involved in my targeted surveillance and gang stalking crimes. There has even been one out of court settlement in one case in the Seattle area for these criminal activities by Homeland Security Personnel.

My cruise control stopped working on my one hundred forty mile excursion back from Spokane WA, on Thursday February 26th (about two weeks ago), and I was gang stalked on the road by numerous vehicles (one of them with a Big Transformer Decal on the Back Window, one with a Big US “Infantry” sticker on his back window, as well as by WA license plate # WEPLAY2) and after they all turned off and I got past Colville, WA, I attempted my cruise control again and it began working. I know they have had remote control over my car alarms on my vehicles for a long time now, and it looks to me that they can also remote control my cruise control as well now……

They have been using FOIA DENIALS, FOIA APPEAL DENIALS, GAG ORDERS, NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS AND EVEN – “CLASSIFYING” INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COVER UP THEIR CRIMES AGAINST TARGETED INDIVIDUALS, ACTIVISTS AND JOURNALISTS.

Witness: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car, Q13 FOX News

Witness: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car

SEATTLE — A West Seattle man is sharing a surveillance movie that shows the scaring way thieves are using technology to break into cars.

See the movie as a man approaches Tom Dahl’s truck in this driveway. He attempts the treat, but the door is locked. So he takes off his backpack, moves it close to the window. Seconds later, he’s able to get inwards.

Photo Gallery

“He opens the door up,” says Dahl. “The lights went on, it was disarmed.”

Dahl is glad the thief didn’t take his truck. All he did was rummage through the contents of his glove compartment.

“I was clever enough not to carry anything of value in there. That’s what he was looking for.”

But Dahl is worried about how the thief got in so lightly.

“You used to have a wire that you slipped down the window, when it was mechanical. But now it’s electronic.”

Cases like this are becoming more common across the region.

Lars Carlson says the man who broke into his car in January also appeared to be carrying something in a backpack.

“It’s running through codes automatically or it’s a button they’re pushing or something is happening. But whatever it does, it seems to trick the car into thinking he’s got the legitimate keys.”

Seattle police say they don’t know exactly what kind of device thieves are using, or how it works. But they are worried.

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

Dahl says automakers need to do something to give people a little more security. But until that happens, he’s going to share this movie with as many neighbors as he can.

“I hope other people pay attention, make sure things are secure and locked, and don’t keep things in your car that are of any value.”

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

thirty two comments

Slam1263 (@IKnowBO)

It is just a random code transmitter.

They can transmit a million codes with the shove of a button.

Tow truck driver have been using them for over twenty years.

Don’t the receivers limit the number of failed attempts per 2nd?

Sadly No they don’t

Rodger Wolkins

They need to emit a cloud of pepper splatter after three failed attempts.

Fresh Dude

Then cars in parking lots would permanently be admitting pepper dump, in a parking lot hundreds of remote keys are used permanently, so it has to be able to see signals without assuming it is failed attempts. They need to increase the complexity of the codes, add more bits, make it too hard to crack.

ashford
lionfan

Can very likely take the entire damn car if it uses keyless ignition, right?

Testicules

For most cars, the thief would still have to deal with the mechanical steering lock that is released by the mechanical portion of the key.

As for some cars that now have keyless shove button commence features… ?

clovellstc

The car permanently scans for the key. Since this is most likely just a device and sends out a bunch of signals in a row he wouldn’t know which one was for the car, so I doubt it would work on the ignition.

Phillip Coiner

I know how they are doing it. Have the cops send me an e-mail

john Bowler

Witness a classic Forrest Whitaker film “Ghost Dog”. The hero uses one of those code generators to steal luxury cars.

So, They may steal them from Tow Truck Drivers?

Tester

The device works by “pinging” the FOB on the key chain which, in turn, generates a signal to the vehicle. The device only works when the keys are within operational range of the vehicle.

Frank

This techbology isn’t fresh, over a decade old if anything. They demonstrated this in the movie, ‘Gone in sixty Seconds’.

Device is available on aliexpress from china for $600 or less. Clones key fobs and can transmit them. It’s not a mystery.

Thats not how they work. You need access to the original keys and the car to make a clone.

Most people keep their registration and garage door opener in their car. If a thief sees you leave your vehicle in a parking lot and can access your car this way, he can go to your home and rob it while you’re shopping or standing in the parking lot wondering where your car is.

Dan Darius

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

It’s a shame that cops are always reactive instead of proactive.

Dan Darius
Dee Ouchman

It’s a elementary Tesla coil which energised the door lock/unlock servo.

Justa Joe

I don’t need a fresh car that badly. My two thousand five Ford Concentrate has manual (mechanical) doorlocks, manual (palm crank) windows, and a 5-speed manual transmission. Its also carrying 275,000 miles on the odometer.

I’m in no fear of anyone attempting to steal my wheels.

Marc M

Yes, we have the exact same car – two thousand five Ford Concentrate. Looks like a ruddy ordnance vehicle, but I like it because it has NOTHING (except AC). Manual trans, windows, everything. And a freakin’ metal key. I do not like this fresh crap. “The more the over-think the plumbing, the lighter it is to stop up the drain,” in the words of Scotty. And every journey to the stealership to fix the over-thought under-engineered geek fucktoys is an exercise on your wallet.

This is accomplish rubbish. The rolling code protocol (keyloq) used by keyless entry will only permit two hundred fifty six code attempts before the original key will need to be reset. This is a hoax.

George Johnson

Evidently the cops are NOT one step ahead of the criminals.

Starheart

There are too many COPS that ARE the CRIMINALS OUT THERE.

pithypaul

The thief is going to sue for invasion of his own privacy, as nobody asked him for permission to use his picture. Hey, this is Amerika.

SMARTERTHANYOU

Wow.. these reporters, especially the police department, are frankly imbeciles! The technology is over a decade old, it’s called a laptop and a receiver.

Starheart

Homeland Security Personnel are using very advanced electronic technology to hack into everything now.

People like Kay Griggs, Michael Hastings, Phillip Marshall, Judi Bari and myself have been targeted by some of these these special ops Homeland Security personnel involved in criminal operations in the US. They have been promoting and rewarding war criminals for years from the CIA and Military Black Sites and Torment Facilities, into Homeland Security, FBI, Law Enforcement, and other government agencies across the country, to target citizens for surveillance and crimes.

(Witness Kay Griggs movies on you tube, as she gives her testimonial for what has been going on for a long time now.)

Since 2011, I’ve been targeted for surveillance burglaries, vandalism, pet torment, vehicle tampering as well as the planting of stolen and unknown origin property and malicious prosecution. My safe deposit box in, Colville, WA ,was even burglarized. I can’t find any organization to help me, out of the dozens and dozens of civil and constitutional rights organizations and attorneys I’ve contacted. I had to get a private investigator to trace license plates and find out who some of the people involved in these targeted black operations are.

I can’t get my FOIA Requests fulfilled for information on my surveillance “Watch List” targeted crimes and it’s even common skill in Washington state that Homeland Security personnel are involved in my targeted surveillance and gang stalking crimes. There has even been one out of court settlement in one case in the Seattle area for these criminal activities by Homeland Security Personnel.

My cruise control stopped working on my one hundred forty mile excursion back from Spokane WA, on Thursday February 26th (about two weeks ago), and I was gang stalked on the road by numerous vehicles (one of them with a Big Transformer Decal on the Back Window, one with a Big US “Infantry” sticker on his back window, as well as by WA license plate # WEPLAY2) and after they all turned off and I got past Colville, WA, I attempted my cruise control again and it commenced working. I know they have had remote control over my car alarms on my vehicles for a long time now, and it looks to me that they can also remote control my cruise control as well now……

They have been using FOIA DENIALS, FOIA APPEAL DENIALS, GAG ORDERS, NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS AND EVEN – “CLASSIFYING” INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COVER UP THEIR CRIMES AGAINST TARGETED INDIVIDUALS, ACTIVISTS AND JOURNALISTS.

Witness: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car, Q13 FOX News

Observe: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car

SEATTLE — A West Seattle man is sharing a surveillance movie that shows the scaring way thieves are using technology to break into cars.

Witness the movie as a man approaches Tom Dahl’s truck in this driveway. He attempts the treat, but the door is locked. So he takes off his backpack, moves it close to the window. Seconds later, he’s able to get inwards.

Photo Gallery

“He opens the door up,” says Dahl. “The lights went on, it was disarmed.”

Dahl is glad the thief didn’t take his truck. All he did was rummage through the contents of his glove compartment.

“I was wise enough not to carry anything of value in there. That’s what he was looking for.”

But Dahl is worried about how the thief got in so lightly.

“You used to have a wire that you glided down the window, when it was mechanical. But now it’s electronic.”

Cases like this are becoming more common across the region.

Lars Carlson says the man who broke into his car in January also appeared to be carrying something in a backpack.

“It’s running through codes automatically or it’s a button they’re pushing or something is happening. But whatever it does, it seems to trick the car into thinking he’s got the legitimate keys.”

Seattle police say they don’t know exactly what kind of device thieves are using, or how it works. But they are worried.

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

Dahl says automakers need to do something to give people a little more security. But until that happens, he’s going to share this movie with as many neighbors as he can.

“I hope other people pay attention, make sure things are secure and locked, and don’t keep things in your car that are of any value.”

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

thirty two comments

Slam1263 (@IKnowBO)

It is just a random code transmitter.

They can transmit a million codes with the thrust of a button.

Tow truck driver have been using them for over twenty years.

Don’t the receivers limit the number of failed attempts per 2nd?

Sadly No they don’t

Rodger Wolkins

They need to emit a cloud of pepper burst after three failed attempts.

Fresh Dude

Then cars in parking lots would permanently be admitting pepper burst, in a parking lot hundreds of remote keys are used permanently, so it has to be able to see signals without assuming it is failed attempts. They need to increase the complexity of the codes, add more bits, make it too hard to crack.

ashford
lionfan

Can very likely take the entire damn car if it uses keyless ignition, right?

Testicules

For most cars, the thief would still have to deal with the mechanical steering lock that is released by the mechanical portion of the key.

As for some cars that now have keyless thrust button commence features… ?

clovellstc

The car permanently scans for the key. Since this is most likely just a device and sends out a bunch of signals in a row he wouldn’t know which one was for the car, so I doubt it would work on the ignition.

Phillip Coiner

I know how they are doing it. Have the cops send me an e-mail

john Bowler

See a classic Forrest Whitaker film “Ghost Dog”. The hero uses one of those code generators to steal luxury cars.

So, They may steal them from Tow Truck Drivers?

Tester

The device works by “pinging” the FOB on the key chain which, in turn, generates a signal to the vehicle. The device only works when the keys are within operational range of the vehicle.

Frank

This techbology isn’t fresh, over a decade old if anything. They demonstrated this in the movie, ‘Gone in sixty Seconds’.

Device is available on aliexpress from china for $600 or less. Clones key fobs and can transmit them. It’s not a mystery.

Thats not how they work. You need access to the original keys and the car to make a clone.

Most people keep their registration and garage door opener in their car. If a thief witnesses you leave your vehicle in a parking lot and can access your car this way, he can go to your home and rob it while you’re shopping or standing in the parking lot wondering where your car is.

Dan Darius

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

It’s a shame that cops are always reactive instead of proactive.

Dan Darius
Dee Ouchman

It’s a ordinary Tesla coil which energised the door lock/unlock servo.

Justa Joe

I don’t need a fresh car that badly. My two thousand five Ford Concentrate has manual (mechanical) doorlocks, manual (arm crank) windows, and a 5-speed manual transmission. Its also carrying 275,000 miles on the odometer.

I’m in no fear of anyone attempting to steal my wheels.

Marc M

Yes, we have the exact same car – two thousand five Ford Concentrate. Looks like a ruddy ordnance vehicle, but I like it because it has NOTHING (except AC). Manual trans, windows, everything. And a freakin’ metal key. I do not like this fresh crap. “The more the over-think the plumbing, the lighter it is to stop up the drain,” in the words of Scotty. And every journey to the stealership to fix the over-thought under-engineered geek fucktoys is an exercise on your wallet.

This is accomplish rubbish. The rolling code protocol (keyloq) used by keyless entry will only permit two hundred fifty six code attempts before the original key will need to be reset. This is a hoax.

George Johnson

Evidently the cops are NOT one step ahead of the criminals.

Starheart

There are too many COPS that ARE the CRIMINALS OUT THERE.

pithypaul

The thief is going to sue for invasion of his own privacy, as nobody asked him for permission to use his picture. Hey, this is Amerika.

SMARTERTHANYOU

Wow.. these reporters, especially the police department, are frankly imbeciles! The technology is over a decade old, it’s called a laptop and a receiver.

Starheart

Homeland Security Personnel are using very advanced electronic technology to hack into everything now.

People like Kay Griggs, Michael Hastings, Phillip Marshall, Judi Bari and myself have been targeted by some of these these special ops Homeland Security personnel involved in criminal operations in the US. They have been promoting and rewarding war criminals for years from the CIA and Military Black Sites and Torment Facilities, into Homeland Security, FBI, Law Enforcement, and other government agencies across the country, to target citizens for surveillance and crimes.

(Witness Kay Griggs movies on you tube, as she gives her testimonial for what has been going on for a long time now.)

Since 2011, I’ve been targeted for surveillance burglaries, vandalism, pet torment, vehicle tampering as well as the planting of stolen and unknown origin property and malicious prosecution. My safe deposit box in, Colville, WA ,was even burglarized. I can’t find any organization to help me, out of the dozens and dozens of civil and constitutional rights organizations and attorneys I’ve contacted. I had to get a private investigator to trace license plates and find out who some of the people involved in these targeted black operations are.

I can’t get my FOIA Requests fulfilled for information on my surveillance “Watch List” targeted crimes and it’s even common skill in Washington state that Homeland Security personnel are involved in my targeted surveillance and gang stalking crimes. There has even been one out of court settlement in one case in the Seattle area for these criminal activities by Homeland Security Personnel.

My cruise control stopped working on my one hundred forty mile tour back from Spokane WA, on Thursday February 26th (about two weeks ago), and I was gang stalked on the road by numerous vehicles (one of them with a Big Transformer Decal on the Back Window, one with a Big US “Infantry” sticker on his back window, as well as by WA license plate # WEPLAY2) and after they all turned off and I got past Colville, WA, I attempted my cruise control again and it commenced working. I know they have had remote control over my car alarms on my vehicles for a long time now, and it looks to me that they can also remote control my cruise control as well now……

They have been using FOIA DENIALS, FOIA APPEAL DENIALS, GAG ORDERS, NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS AND EVEN – “CLASSIFYING” INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COVER UP THEIR CRIMES AGAINST TARGETED INDIVIDUALS, ACTIVISTS AND JOURNALISTS.

Observe: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car, Q13 FOX News

Witness: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car

SEATTLE — A West Seattle man is sharing a surveillance movie that shows the panicking way thieves are using technology to break into cars.

See the movie as a man approaches Tom Dahl’s truck in this driveway. He attempts the treat, but the door is locked. So he takes off his backpack, moves it close to the window. Seconds later, he’s able to get inwards.

Photo Gallery

“He opens the door up,” says Dahl. “The lights went on, it was disarmed.”

Dahl is glad the thief didn’t take his truck. All he did was rummage through the contents of his glove compartment.

“I was clever enough not to carry anything of value in there. That’s what he was looking for.”

But Dahl is worried about how the thief got in so lightly.

“You used to have a wire that you glided down the window, when it was mechanical. But now it’s electronic.”

Cases like this are becoming more common across the region.

Lars Carlson says the man who broke into his car in January also appeared to be carrying something in a backpack.

“It’s running through codes automatically or it’s a button they’re pushing or something is happening. But whatever it does, it seems to trick the car into thinking he’s got the legitimate keys.”

Seattle police say they don’t know exactly what kind of device thieves are using, or how it works. But they are worried.

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

Dahl says automakers need to do something to give people a little more security. But until that happens, he’s going to share this movie with as many neighbors as he can.

“I hope other people pay attention, make sure things are secure and locked, and don’t keep things in your car that are of any value.”

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

thirty two comments

Slam1263 (@IKnowBO)

It is just a random code transmitter.

They can transmit a million codes with the shove of a button.

Tow truck driver have been using them for over twenty years.

Don’t the receivers limit the number of failed attempts per 2nd?

Sadly No they don’t

Rodger Wolkins

They need to emit a cloud of pepper burst after three failed attempts.

Fresh Man

Then cars in parking lots would permanently be admitting pepper sploog, in a parking lot hundreds of remote keys are used permanently, so it has to be able to see signals without assuming it is failed attempts. They need to increase the complexity of the codes, add more bits, make it too hard to crack.

ashford
lionfan

Can very likely take the entire damn car if it uses keyless ignition, right?

Testicules

For most cars, the thief would still have to deal with the mechanical steering lock that is released by the mechanical portion of the key.

As for some cars that now have keyless thrust button commence features… ?

clovellstc

The car permanently scans for the key. Since this is very likely just a device and sends out a bunch of signals in a row he wouldn’t know which one was for the car, so I doubt it would work on the ignition.

Phillip Coiner

I know how they are doing it. Have the cops send me an e-mail

john Bowler

Witness a classic Forrest Whitaker film “Ghost Dog”. The hero uses one of those code generators to steal luxury cars.

So, They may steal them from Tow Truck Drivers?

Tester

The device works by “pinging” the FOB on the key chain which, in turn, generates a signal to the vehicle. The device only works when the keys are within operational range of the vehicle.

Frank

This techbology isn’t fresh, over a decade old if anything. They demonstrated this in the movie, ‘Gone in sixty Seconds’.

Device is available on aliexpress from china for $600 or less. Clones key fobs and can transmit them. It’s not a mystery.

Thats not how they work. You need access to the original keys and the car to make a clone.

Most people keep their registration and garage door opener in their car. If a thief observes you leave your vehicle in a parking lot and can access your car this way, he can go to your home and rob it while you’re shopping or standing in the parking lot wondering where your car is.

Dan Darius

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

It’s a shame that cops are always reactive instead of proactive.

Dan Darius
Dee Ouchman

It’s a elementary Tesla coil which energised the door lock/unlock servo.

Justa Joe

I don’t need a fresh car that badly. My two thousand five Ford Concentrate has manual (mechanical) doorlocks, manual (forearm crank) windows, and a 5-speed manual transmission. Its also carrying 275,000 miles on the odometer.

I’m in no fear of anyone attempting to steal my wheels.

Marc M

Yes, we have the exact same car – two thousand five Ford Concentrate. Looks like a ruddy ordnance vehicle, but I like it because it has NOTHING (except AC). Manual trans, windows, everything. And a freakin’ metal key. I do not like this fresh crap. “The more the over-think the plumbing, the lighter it is to stop up the drain,” in the words of Scotty. And every tour to the stealership to fix the over-thought under-engineered geek fucktoys is an exercise on your wallet.

This is accomplish rubbish. The rolling code protocol (keyloq) used by keyless entry will only permit two hundred fifty six code attempts before the original key will need to be reset. This is a hoax.

George Johnson

Evidently the cops are NOT one step ahead of the criminals.

Starheart

There are too many COPS that ARE the CRIMINALS OUT THERE.

pithypaul

The thief is going to sue for invasion of his own privacy, as nobody asked him for permission to use his picture. Hey, this is Amerika.

SMARTERTHANYOU

Wow.. these reporters, especially the police department, are frankly imbeciles! The technology is over a decade old, it’s called a laptop and a receiver.

Starheart

Homeland Security Personnel are using very advanced electronic technology to hack into everything now.

People like Kay Griggs, Michael Hastings, Phillip Marshall, Judi Bari and myself have been targeted by some of these these special ops Homeland Security personnel involved in criminal operations in the US. They have been promoting and rewarding war criminals for years from the CIA and Military Black Sites and Torment Facilities, into Homeland Security, FBI, Law Enforcement, and other government agencies across the country, to target citizens for surveillance and crimes.

(See Kay Griggs movies on you tube, as she gives her testimonial for what has been going on for a long time now.)

Since 2011, I’ve been targeted for surveillance burglaries, vandalism, pet torment, vehicle tampering as well as the planting of stolen and unknown origin property and malicious prosecution. My safe deposit box in, Colville, WA ,was even burglarized. I can’t find any organization to help me, out of the dozens and dozens of civil and constitutional rights organizations and attorneys I’ve contacted. I had to get a private investigator to trace license plates and find out who some of the people involved in these targeted black operations are.

I can’t get my FOIA Requests fulfilled for information on my surveillance “Watch List” targeted crimes and it’s even common skill in Washington state that Homeland Security personnel are involved in my targeted surveillance and gang stalking crimes. There has even been one out of court settlement in one case in the Seattle area for these criminal activities by Homeland Security Personnel.

My cruise control stopped working on my one hundred forty mile tour back from Spokane WA, on Thursday February 26th (about two weeks ago), and I was gang stalked on the road by numerous vehicles (one of them with a Big Transformer Decal on the Back Window, one with a Big US “Infantry” sticker on his back window, as well as by WA license plate # WEPLAY2) and after they all turned off and I got past Colville, WA, I attempted my cruise control again and it commenced working. I know they have had remote control over my car alarms on my vehicles for a long time now, and it looks to me that they can also remote control my cruise control as well now……

They have been using FOIA DENIALS, FOIA APPEAL DENIALS, GAG ORDERS, NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS AND EVEN – “CLASSIFYING” INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COVER UP THEIR CRIMES AGAINST TARGETED INDIVIDUALS, ACTIVISTS AND JOURNALISTS.

Witness: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car, Q13 FOX News

See: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car

SEATTLE — A West Seattle man is sharing a surveillance movie that shows the scaring way thieves are using technology to break into cars.

See the movie as a man approaches Tom Dahl’s truck in this driveway. He attempts the treat, but the door is locked. So he takes off his backpack, moves it close to the window. Seconds later, he’s able to get inwards.

Photo Gallery

“He opens the door up,” says Dahl. “The lights went on, it was disarmed.”

Dahl is glad the thief didn’t take his truck. All he did was rummage through the contents of his glove compartment.

“I was clever enough not to carry anything of value in there. That’s what he was looking for.”

But Dahl is worried about how the thief got in so lightly.

“You used to have a wire that you glided down the window, when it was mechanical. But now it’s electronic.”

Cases like this are becoming more common across the region.

Lars Carlson says the man who broke into his car in January also appeared to be carrying something in a backpack.

“It’s running through codes automatically or it’s a button they’re pushing or something is happening. But whatever it does, it seems to trick the car into thinking he’s got the legitimate keys.”

Seattle police say they don’t know exactly what kind of device thieves are using, or how it works. But they are worried.

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

Dahl says automakers need to do something to give people a little more security. But until that happens, he’s going to share this movie with as many neighbors as he can.

“I hope other people pay attention, make sure things are secure and locked, and don’t keep things in your car that are of any value.”

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

thirty two comments

Slam1263 (@IKnowBO)

It is just a random code transmitter.

They can transmit a million codes with the thrust of a button.

Tow truck driver have been using them for over twenty years.

Don’t the receivers limit the number of failed attempts per 2nd?

Sadly No they don’t

Rodger Wolkins

They need to emit a cloud of pepper bust after three failed attempts.

Fresh Stud

Then cars in parking lots would permanently be admitting pepper bust, in a parking lot hundreds of remote keys are used permanently, so it has to be able to see signals without assuming it is failed attempts. They need to increase the complexity of the codes, add more bits, make it too hard to crack.

ashford
lionfan

Can very likely take the entire damn car if it uses keyless ignition, right?

Testicules

For most cars, the thief would still have to deal with the mechanical steering lock that is released by the mechanical portion of the key.

As for some cars that now have keyless thrust button commence features… ?

clovellstc

The car permanently scans for the key. Since this is most likely just a device and sends out a bunch of signals in a row he wouldn’t know which one was for the car, so I doubt it would work on the ignition.

Phillip Coiner

I know how they are doing it. Have the cops send me an e-mail

john Bowler

See a classic Forrest Whitaker film “Ghost Dog”. The hero uses one of those code generators to steal luxury cars.

So, They may steal them from Tow Truck Drivers?

Tester

The device works by “pinging” the FOB on the key chain which, in turn, generates a signal to the vehicle. The device only works when the keys are within operational range of the vehicle.

Frank

This techbology isn’t fresh, over a decade old if anything. They demonstrated this in the movie, ‘Gone in sixty Seconds’.

Device is available on aliexpress from china for $600 or less. Clones key fobs and can transmit them. It’s not a mystery.

Thats not how they work. You need access to the original keys and the car to make a clone.

Most people keep their registration and garage door opener in their car. If a thief observes you leave your vehicle in a parking lot and can access your car this way, he can go to your home and rob it while you’re shopping or standing in the parking lot wondering where your car is.

Dan Darius

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

It’s a shame that cops are always reactive instead of proactive.

Dan Darius
Dee Ouchman

It’s a ordinary Tesla coil which energised the door lock/unlock servo.

Justa Joe

I don’t need a fresh car that badly. My two thousand five Ford Concentrate has manual (mechanical) doorlocks, manual (arm crank) windows, and a 5-speed manual transmission. Its also carrying 275,000 miles on the odometer.

I’m in no fear of anyone attempting to steal my wheels.

Marc M

Yes, we have the exact same car – two thousand five Ford Concentrate. Looks like a ruddy ordnance vehicle, but I like it because it has NOTHING (except AC). Manual trans, windows, everything. And a freakin’ metal key. I do not like this fresh crap. “The more the over-think the plumbing, the lighter it is to stop up the drain,” in the words of Scotty. And every excursion to the stealership to fix the over-thought under-engineered geek fucktoys is an exercise on your wallet.

This is finish rubbish. The rolling code protocol (keyloq) used by keyless entry will only permit two hundred fifty six code attempts before the original key will need to be reset. This is a hoax.

George Johnson

Evidently the cops are NOT one step ahead of the criminals.

Starheart

There are too many COPS that ARE the CRIMINALS OUT THERE.

pithypaul

The thief is going to sue for invasion of his own privacy, as nobody asked him for permission to use his picture. Hey, this is Amerika.

SMARTERTHANYOU

Wow.. these reporters, especially the police department, are frankly imbeciles! The technology is over a decade old, it’s called a laptop and a receiver.

Starheart

Homeland Security Personnel are using very advanced electronic technology to hack into everything now.

People like Kay Griggs, Michael Hastings, Phillip Marshall, Judi Bari and myself have been targeted by some of these these special ops Homeland Security personnel involved in criminal operations in the US. They have been promoting and rewarding war criminals for years from the CIA and Military Black Sites and Torment Facilities, into Homeland Security, FBI, Law Enforcement, and other government agencies across the country, to target citizens for surveillance and crimes.

(Observe Kay Griggs movies on you tube, as she gives her testimonial for what has been going on for a long time now.)

Since 2011, I’ve been targeted for surveillance burglaries, vandalism, pet torment, vehicle tampering as well as the planting of stolen and unknown origin property and malicious prosecution. My safe deposit box in, Colville, WA ,was even burglarized. I can’t find any organization to help me, out of the dozens and dozens of civil and constitutional rights organizations and attorneys I’ve contacted. I had to get a private investigator to trace license plates and find out who some of the people involved in these targeted black operations are.

I can’t get my FOIA Requests fulfilled for information on my surveillance “Watch List” targeted crimes and it’s even common skill in Washington state that Homeland Security personnel are involved in my targeted surveillance and gang stalking crimes. There has even been one out of court settlement in one case in the Seattle area for these criminal activities by Homeland Security Personnel.

My cruise control stopped working on my one hundred forty mile tour back from Spokane WA, on Thursday February 26th (about two weeks ago), and I was gang stalked on the road by numerous vehicles (one of them with a Big Transformer Decal on the Back Window, one with a Big US “Infantry” sticker on his back window, as well as by WA license plate # WEPLAY2) and after they all turned off and I got past Colville, WA, I attempted my cruise control again and it embarked working. I know they have had remote control over my car alarms on my vehicles for a long time now, and it looks to me that they can also remote control my cruise control as well now……

They have been using FOIA DENIALS, FOIA APPEAL DENIALS, GAG ORDERS, NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS AND EVEN – “CLASSIFYING” INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COVER UP THEIR CRIMES AGAINST TARGETED INDIVIDUALS, ACTIVISTS AND JOURNALISTS.

See: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car, Q13 FOX News

See: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car

SEATTLE — A West Seattle man is sharing a surveillance movie that shows the scaring way thieves are using technology to break into cars.

Observe the movie as a man approaches Tom Dahl’s truck in this driveway. He attempts the treat, but the door is locked. So he takes off his backpack, moves it close to the window. Seconds later, he’s able to get inwards.

Photo Gallery

“He opens the door up,” says Dahl. “The lights went on, it was disarmed.”

Dahl is glad the thief didn’t take his truck. All he did was rummage through the contents of his glove compartment.

“I was clever enough not to carry anything of value in there. That’s what he was looking for.”

But Dahl is worried about how the thief got in so lightly.

“You used to have a wire that you glided down the window, when it was mechanical. But now it’s electronic.”

Cases like this are becoming more common across the region.

Lars Carlson says the man who broke into his car in January also appeared to be carrying something in a backpack.

“It’s running through codes automatically or it’s a button they’re pushing or something is happening. But whatever it does, it seems to trick the car into thinking he’s got the legitimate keys.”

Seattle police say they don’t know exactly what kind of device thieves are using, or how it works. But they are worried.

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

Dahl says automakers need to do something to give people a little more security. But until that happens, he’s going to share this movie with as many neighbors as he can.

“I hope other people pay attention, make sure things are secure and locked, and don’t keep things in your car that are of any value.”

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

thirty two comments

Slam1263 (@IKnowBO)

It is just a random code transmitter.

They can transmit a million codes with the thrust of a button.

Tow truck driver have been using them for over twenty years.

Don’t the receivers limit the number of failed attempts per 2nd?

Sadly No they don’t

Rodger Wolkins

They need to emit a cloud of pepper splatter after three failed attempts.

Fresh Dude

Then cars in parking lots would permanently be admitting pepper unload, in a parking lot hundreds of remote keys are used permanently, so it has to be able to see signals without assuming it is failed attempts. They need to increase the complexity of the codes, add more bits, make it too hard to crack.

ashford
lionfan

Can most likely take the entire damn car if it uses keyless ignition, right?

Testicules

For most cars, the thief would still have to deal with the mechanical steering lock that is released by the mechanical portion of the key.

As for some cars that now have keyless thrust button embark features… ?

clovellstc

The car permanently scans for the key. Since this is very likely just a device and sends out a bunch of signals in a row he wouldn’t know which one was for the car, so I doubt it would work on the ignition.

Phillip Coiner

I know how they are doing it. Have the cops send me an e-mail

john Bowler

Witness a classic Forrest Whitaker film “Ghost Dog”. The hero uses one of those code generators to steal luxury cars.

So, They may steal them from Tow Truck Drivers?

Tester

The device works by “pinging” the FOB on the key chain which, in turn, generates a signal to the vehicle. The device only works when the keys are within operational range of the vehicle.

Frank

This techbology isn’t fresh, over a decade old if anything. They demonstrated this in the movie, ‘Gone in sixty Seconds’.

Device is available on aliexpress from china for $600 or less. Clones key fobs and can transmit them. It’s not a mystery.

Thats not how they work. You need access to the original keys and the car to make a clone.

Most people keep their registration and garage door opener in their car. If a thief witnesses you leave your vehicle in a parking lot and can access your car this way, he can go to your home and rob it while you’re shopping or standing in the parking lot wondering where your car is.

Dan Darius

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

It’s a shame that cops are always reactive instead of proactive.

Dan Darius
Dee Ouchman

It’s a plain Tesla coil which energised the door lock/unlock servo.

Justa Joe

I don’t need a fresh car that badly. My two thousand five Ford Concentrate has manual (mechanical) doorlocks, manual (mitt crank) windows, and a 5-speed manual transmission. Its also carrying 275,000 miles on the odometer.

I’m in no fear of anyone attempting to steal my wheels.

Marc M

Yes, we have the exact same car – two thousand five Ford Concentrate. Looks like a ruddy ordnance vehicle, but I like it because it has NOTHING (except AC). Manual trans, windows, everything. And a freakin’ metal key. I do not like this fresh crap. “The more the over-think the plumbing, the lighter it is to stop up the drain,” in the words of Scotty. And every excursion to the stealership to fix the over-thought under-engineered geek fucktoys is an exercise on your wallet.

This is accomplish rubbish. The rolling code protocol (keyloq) used by keyless entry will only permit two hundred fifty six code attempts before the original key will need to be reset. This is a hoax.

George Johnson

Evidently the cops are NOT one step ahead of the criminals.

Starheart

There are too many COPS that ARE the CRIMINALS OUT THERE.

pithypaul

The thief is going to sue for invasion of his own privacy, as nobody asked him for permission to use his pic. Hey, this is Amerika.

SMARTERTHANYOU

Wow.. these reporters, especially the police department, are frankly imbeciles! The technology is over a decade old, it’s called a laptop and a receiver.

Starheart

Homeland Security Personnel are using very advanced electronic technology to hack into everything now.

People like Kay Griggs, Michael Hastings, Phillip Marshall, Judi Bari and myself have been targeted by some of these these special ops Homeland Security personnel involved in criminal operations in the US. They have been promoting and rewarding war criminals for years from the CIA and Military Black Sites and Torment Facilities, into Homeland Security, FBI, Law Enforcement, and other government agencies across the country, to target citizens for surveillance and crimes.

(Observe Kay Griggs movies on you tube, as she gives her testimonial for what has been going on for a long time now.)

Since 2011, I’ve been targeted for surveillance burglaries, vandalism, pet torment, vehicle tampering as well as the planting of stolen and unknown origin property and malicious prosecution. My safe deposit box in, Colville, WA ,was even burglarized. I can’t find any organization to help me, out of the dozens and dozens of civil and constitutional rights organizations and attorneys I’ve contacted. I had to get a private investigator to trace license plates and find out who some of the people involved in these targeted black operations are.

I can’t get my FOIA Requests fulfilled for information on my surveillance “Watch List” targeted crimes and it’s even common skill in Washington state that Homeland Security personnel are involved in my targeted surveillance and gang stalking crimes. There has even been one out of court settlement in one case in the Seattle area for these criminal activities by Homeland Security Personnel.

My cruise control stopped working on my one hundred forty mile journey back from Spokane WA, on Thursday February 26th (about two weeks ago), and I was gang stalked on the road by numerous vehicles (one of them with a Big Transformer Decal on the Back Window, one with a Big US “Infantry” sticker on his back window, as well as by WA license plate # WEPLAY2) and after they all turned off and I got past Colville, WA, I attempted my cruise control again and it commenced working. I know they have had remote control over my car alarms on my vehicles for a long time now, and it looks to me that they can also remote control my cruise control as well now……

They have been using FOIA DENIALS, FOIA APPEAL DENIALS, GAG ORDERS, NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS AND EVEN – “CLASSIFYING” INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COVER UP THEIR CRIMES AGAINST TARGETED INDIVIDUALS, ACTIVISTS AND JOURNALISTS.

See: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car, Q13 FOX News

See: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car

SEATTLE — A West Seattle man is sharing a surveillance movie that shows the panicking way thieves are using technology to break into cars.

Observe the movie as a man approaches Tom Dahl’s truck in this driveway. He attempts the treat, but the door is locked. So he takes off his backpack, moves it close to the window. Seconds later, he’s able to get inwards.

Photo Gallery

“He opens the door up,” says Dahl. “The lights went on, it was disarmed.”

Dahl is glad the thief didn’t take his truck. All he did was rummage through the contents of his glove compartment.

“I was clever enough not to carry anything of value in there. That’s what he was looking for.”

But Dahl is worried about how the thief got in so lightly.

“You used to have a wire that you slipped down the window, when it was mechanical. But now it’s electronic.”

Cases like this are becoming more common across the region.

Lars Carlson says the man who broke into his car in January also appeared to be carrying something in a backpack.

“It’s running through codes automatically or it’s a button they’re pushing or something is happening. But whatever it does, it seems to trick the car into thinking he’s got the legitimate keys.”

Seattle police say they don’t know exactly what kind of device thieves are using, or how it works. But they are worried.

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

Dahl says automakers need to do something to give people a little more security. But until that happens, he’s going to share this movie with as many neighbors as he can.

“I hope other people pay attention, make sure things are secure and locked, and don’t keep things in your car that are of any value.”

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

thirty two comments

Slam1263 (@IKnowBO)

It is just a random code transmitter.

They can transmit a million codes with the thrust of a button.

Tow truck driver have been using them for over twenty years.

Don’t the receivers limit the number of failed attempts per 2nd?

Sadly No they don’t

Rodger Wolkins

They need to emit a cloud of pepper sploog after three failed attempts.

Fresh Dude

Then cars in parking lots would permanently be admitting pepper splatter, in a parking lot hundreds of remote keys are used permanently, so it has to be able to see signals without assuming it is failed attempts. They need to increase the complexity of the codes, add more bits, make it too hard to crack.

ashford
lionfan

Can most likely take the entire damn car if it uses keyless ignition, right?

Testicules

For most cars, the thief would still have to deal with the mechanical steering lock that is released by the mechanical portion of the key.

As for some cars that now have keyless thrust button embark features… ?

clovellstc

The car permanently scans for the key. Since this is most likely just a device and sends out a bunch of signals in a row he wouldn’t know which one was for the car, so I doubt it would work on the ignition.

Phillip Coiner

I know how they are doing it. Have the cops send me an e-mail

john Bowler

Observe a classic Forrest Whitaker film “Ghost Dog”. The hero uses one of those code generators to steal luxury cars.

So, They may steal them from Tow Truck Drivers?

Tester

The device works by “pinging” the FOB on the key chain which, in turn, generates a signal to the vehicle. The device only works when the keys are within operational range of the vehicle.

Frank

This techbology isn’t fresh, over a decade old if anything. They demonstrated this in the movie, ‘Gone in sixty Seconds’.

Device is available on aliexpress from china for $600 or less. Clones key fobs and can transmit them. It’s not a mystery.

Thats not how they work. You need access to the original keys and the car to make a clone.

Most people keep their registration and garage door opener in their car. If a thief sees you leave your vehicle in a parking lot and can access your car this way, he can go to your home and rob it while you’re shopping or standing in the parking lot wondering where your car is.

Dan Darius

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

It’s a shame that cops are always reactive instead of proactive.

Dan Darius
Dee Ouchman

It’s a plain Tesla coil which energised the door lock/unlock servo.

Justa Joe

I don’t need a fresh car that badly. My two thousand five Ford Concentrate has manual (mechanical) doorlocks, manual (forearm crank) windows, and a 5-speed manual transmission. Its also carrying 275,000 miles on the odometer.

I’m in no fear of anyone attempting to steal my wheels.

Marc M

Yes, we have the exact same car – two thousand five Ford Concentrate. Looks like a ruddy ordnance vehicle, but I like it because it has NOTHING (except AC). Manual trans, windows, everything. And a freakin’ metal key. I do not like this fresh crap. “The more the over-think the plumbing, the lighter it is to stop up the drain,” in the words of Scotty. And every journey to the stealership to fix the over-thought under-engineered geek fucktoys is an exercise on your wallet.

This is accomplish rubbish. The rolling code protocol (keyloq) used by keyless entry will only permit two hundred fifty six code attempts before the original key will need to be reset. This is a hoax.

George Johnson

Evidently the cops are NOT one step ahead of the criminals.

Starheart

There are too many COPS that ARE the CRIMINALS OUT THERE.

pithypaul

The thief is going to sue for invasion of his own privacy, as nobody asked him for permission to use his photo. Hey, this is Amerika.

SMARTERTHANYOU

Wow.. these reporters, especially the police department, are frankly imbeciles! The technology is over a decade old, it’s called a laptop and a receiver.

Starheart

Homeland Security Personnel are using very advanced electronic technology to hack into everything now.

People like Kay Griggs, Michael Hastings, Phillip Marshall, Judi Bari and myself have been targeted by some of these these special ops Homeland Security personnel involved in criminal operations in the US. They have been promoting and rewarding war criminals for years from the CIA and Military Black Sites and Torment Facilities, into Homeland Security, FBI, Law Enforcement, and other government agencies across the country, to target citizens for surveillance and crimes.

(See Kay Griggs movies on you tube, as she gives her testimonial for what has been going on for a long time now.)

Since 2011, I’ve been targeted for surveillance burglaries, vandalism, pet torment, vehicle tampering as well as the planting of stolen and unknown origin property and malicious prosecution. My safe deposit box in, Colville, WA ,was even burglarized. I can’t find any organization to help me, out of the dozens and dozens of civil and constitutional rights organizations and attorneys I’ve contacted. I had to get a private investigator to trace license plates and find out who some of the people involved in these targeted black operations are.

I can’t get my FOIA Requests fulfilled for information on my surveillance “Watch List” targeted crimes and it’s even common skill in Washington state that Homeland Security personnel are involved in my targeted surveillance and gang stalking crimes. There has even been one out of court settlement in one case in the Seattle area for these criminal activities by Homeland Security Personnel.

My cruise control stopped working on my one hundred forty mile tour back from Spokane WA, on Thursday February 26th (about two weeks ago), and I was gang stalked on the road by numerous vehicles (one of them with a Big Transformer Decal on the Back Window, one with a Big US “Infantry” sticker on his back window, as well as by WA license plate # WEPLAY2) and after they all turned off and I got past Colville, WA, I attempted my cruise control again and it embarked working. I know they have had remote control over my car alarms on my vehicles for a long time now, and it looks to me that they can also remote control my cruise control as well now……

They have been using FOIA DENIALS, FOIA APPEAL DENIALS, GAG ORDERS, NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS AND EVEN – “CLASSIFYING” INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COVER UP THEIR CRIMES AGAINST TARGETED INDIVIDUALS, ACTIVISTS AND JOURNALISTS.

Witness: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car, Q13 FOX News

Observe: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car

SEATTLE — A West Seattle man is sharing a surveillance movie that shows the panicking way thieves are using technology to break into cars.

See the movie as a man approaches Tom Dahl’s truck in this driveway. He attempts the treat, but the door is locked. So he takes off his backpack, moves it close to the window. Seconds later, he’s able to get inwards.

Photo Gallery

“He opens the door up,” says Dahl. “The lights went on, it was disarmed.”

Dahl is glad the thief didn’t take his truck. All he did was rummage through the contents of his glove compartment.

“I was clever enough not to carry anything of value in there. That’s what he was looking for.”

But Dahl is worried about how the thief got in so lightly.

“You used to have a wire that you glided down the window, when it was mechanical. But now it’s electronic.”

Cases like this are becoming more common across the region.

Lars Carlson says the man who broke into his car in January also appeared to be carrying something in a backpack.

“It’s running through codes automatically or it’s a button they’re pushing or something is happening. But whatever it does, it seems to trick the car into thinking he’s got the legitimate keys.”

Seattle police say they don’t know exactly what kind of device thieves are using, or how it works. But they are worried.

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

Dahl says automakers need to do something to give people a little more security. But until that happens, he’s going to share this movie with as many neighbors as he can.

“I hope other people pay attention, make sure things are secure and locked, and don’t keep things in your car that are of any value.”

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

thirty two comments

Slam1263 (@IKnowBO)

It is just a random code transmitter.

They can transmit a million codes with the shove of a button.

Tow truck driver have been using them for over twenty years.

Don’t the receivers limit the number of failed attempts per 2nd?

Sadly No they don’t

Rodger Wolkins

They need to emit a cloud of pepper sploog after three failed attempts.

Fresh Stud

Then cars in parking lots would permanently be admitting pepper splatter, in a parking lot hundreds of remote keys are used permanently, so it has to be able to see signals without assuming it is failed attempts. They need to increase the complexity of the codes, add more bits, make it too hard to crack.

ashford
lionfan

Can very likely take the entire damn car if it uses keyless ignition, right?

Testicules

For most cars, the thief would still have to deal with the mechanical steering lock that is released by the mechanical portion of the key.

As for some cars that now have keyless thrust button embark features… ?

clovellstc

The car permanently scans for the key. Since this is most likely just a device and sends out a bunch of signals in a row he wouldn’t know which one was for the car, so I doubt it would work on the ignition.

Phillip Coiner

I know how they are doing it. Have the cops send me an e-mail

john Bowler

Witness a classic Forrest Whitaker film “Ghost Dog”. The hero uses one of those code generators to steal luxury cars.

So, They may steal them from Tow Truck Drivers?

Tester

The device works by “pinging” the FOB on the key chain which, in turn, generates a signal to the vehicle. The device only works when the keys are within operational range of the vehicle.

Frank

This techbology isn’t fresh, over a decade old if anything. They demonstrated this in the movie, ‘Gone in sixty Seconds’.

Device is available on aliexpress from china for $600 or less. Clones key fobs and can transmit them. It’s not a mystery.

Thats not how they work. You need access to the original keys and the car to make a clone.

Most people keep their registration and garage door opener in their car. If a thief witnesses you leave your vehicle in a parking lot and can access your car this way, he can go to your home and rob it while you’re shopping or standing in the parking lot wondering where your car is.

Dan Darius

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

It’s a shame that cops are always reactive instead of proactive.

Dan Darius
Dee Ouchman

It’s a elementary Tesla coil which energised the door lock/unlock servo.

Justa Joe

I don’t need a fresh car that badly. My two thousand five Ford Concentrate has manual (mechanical) doorlocks, manual (palm crank) windows, and a 5-speed manual transmission. Its also carrying 275,000 miles on the odometer.

I’m in no fear of anyone attempting to steal my wheels.

Marc M

Yes, we have the exact same car – two thousand five Ford Concentrate. Looks like a ruddy ordnance vehicle, but I like it because it has NOTHING (except AC). Manual trans, windows, everything. And a freakin’ metal key. I do not like this fresh crap. “The more the over-think the plumbing, the lighter it is to stop up the drain,” in the words of Scotty. And every journey to the stealership to fix the over-thought under-engineered geek fucktoys is an exercise on your wallet.

This is finish rubbish. The rolling code protocol (keyloq) used by keyless entry will only permit two hundred fifty six code attempts before the original key will need to be reset. This is a hoax.

George Johnson

Evidently the cops are NOT one step ahead of the criminals.

Starheart

There are too many COPS that ARE the CRIMINALS OUT THERE.

pithypaul

The thief is going to sue for invasion of his own privacy, as nobody asked him for permission to use his pic. Hey, this is Amerika.

SMARTERTHANYOU

Wow.. these reporters, especially the police department, are frankly imbeciles! The technology is over a decade old, it’s called a laptop and a receiver.

Starheart

Homeland Security Personnel are using very advanced electronic technology to hack into everything now.

People like Kay Griggs, Michael Hastings, Phillip Marshall, Judi Bari and myself have been targeted by some of these these special ops Homeland Security personnel involved in criminal operations in the US. They have been promoting and rewarding war criminals for years from the CIA and Military Black Sites and Torment Facilities, into Homeland Security, FBI, Law Enforcement, and other government agencies across the country, to target citizens for surveillance and crimes.

(See Kay Griggs movies on you tube, as she gives her testimonial for what has been going on for a long time now.)

Since 2011, I’ve been targeted for surveillance burglaries, vandalism, pet torment, vehicle tampering as well as the planting of stolen and unknown origin property and malicious prosecution. My safe deposit box in, Colville, WA ,was even burglarized. I can’t find any organization to help me, out of the dozens and dozens of civil and constitutional rights organizations and attorneys I’ve contacted. I had to get a private investigator to trace license plates and find out who some of the people involved in these targeted black operations are.

I can’t get my FOIA Requests fulfilled for information on my surveillance “Watch List” targeted crimes and it’s even common skill in Washington state that Homeland Security personnel are involved in my targeted surveillance and gang stalking crimes. There has even been one out of court settlement in one case in the Seattle area for these criminal activities by Homeland Security Personnel.

My cruise control stopped working on my one hundred forty mile journey back from Spokane WA, on Thursday February 26th (about two weeks ago), and I was gang stalked on the road by numerous vehicles (one of them with a Big Transformer Decal on the Back Window, one with a Big US “Infantry” sticker on his back window, as well as by WA license plate # WEPLAY2) and after they all turned off and I got past Colville, WA, I attempted my cruise control again and it began working. I know they have had remote control over my car alarms on my vehicles for a long time now, and it looks to me that they can also remote control my cruise control as well now……

They have been using FOIA DENIALS, FOIA APPEAL DENIALS, GAG ORDERS, NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS AND EVEN – “CLASSIFYING” INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COVER UP THEIR CRIMES AGAINST TARGETED INDIVIDUALS, ACTIVISTS AND JOURNALISTS.

See: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car, Q13 FOX News

Observe: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car

SEATTLE — A West Seattle man is sharing a surveillance movie that shows the scaring way thieves are using technology to break into cars.

Observe the movie as a man approaches Tom Dahl’s truck in this driveway. He attempts the treat, but the door is locked. So he takes off his backpack, moves it close to the window. Seconds later, he’s able to get inwards.

Photo Gallery

“He opens the door up,” says Dahl. “The lights went on, it was disarmed.”

Dahl is glad the thief didn’t take his truck. All he did was rummage through the contents of his glove compartment.

“I was wise enough not to carry anything of value in there. That’s what he was looking for.”

But Dahl is worried about how the thief got in so lightly.

“You used to have a wire that you slipped down the window, when it was mechanical. But now it’s electronic.”

Cases like this are becoming more common across the region.

Lars Carlson says the man who broke into his car in January also appeared to be carrying something in a backpack.

“It’s running through codes automatically or it’s a button they’re pushing or something is happening. But whatever it does, it seems to trick the car into thinking he’s got the legitimate keys.”

Seattle police say they don’t know exactly what kind of device thieves are using, or how it works. But they are worried.

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

Dahl says automakers need to do something to give people a little more security. But until that happens, he’s going to share this movie with as many neighbors as he can.

“I hope other people pay attention, make sure things are secure and locked, and don’t keep things in your car that are of any value.”

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

thirty two comments

Slam1263 (@IKnowBO)

It is just a random code transmitter.

They can transmit a million codes with the shove of a button.

Tow truck driver have been using them for over twenty years.

Don’t the receivers limit the number of failed attempts per 2nd?

Sadly No they don’t

Rodger Wolkins

They need to emit a cloud of pepper splatter after three failed attempts.

Fresh Boy

Then cars in parking lots would permanently be admitting pepper drizzle, in a parking lot hundreds of remote keys are used permanently, so it has to be able to see signals without assuming it is failed attempts. They need to increase the complexity of the codes, add more bits, make it too hard to crack.

ashford
lionfan

Can most likely take the entire damn car if it uses keyless ignition, right?

Testicules

For most cars, the thief would still have to deal with the mechanical steering lock that is released by the mechanical portion of the key.

As for some cars that now have keyless thrust button commence features… ?

clovellstc

The car permanently scans for the key. Since this is very likely just a device and sends out a bunch of signals in a row he wouldn’t know which one was for the car, so I doubt it would work on the ignition.

Phillip Coiner

I know how they are doing it. Have the cops send me an e-mail

john Bowler

See a classic Forrest Whitaker film “Ghost Dog”. The hero uses one of those code generators to steal luxury cars.

So, They may steal them from Tow Truck Drivers?

Tester

The device works by “pinging” the FOB on the key chain which, in turn, generates a signal to the vehicle. The device only works when the keys are within operational range of the vehicle.

Frank

This techbology isn’t fresh, over a decade old if anything. They demonstrated this in the movie, ‘Gone in sixty Seconds’.

Device is available on aliexpress from china for $600 or less. Clones key fobs and can transmit them. It’s not a mystery.

Thats not how they work. You need access to the original keys and the car to make a clone.

Most people keep their registration and garage door opener in their car. If a thief witnesses you leave your vehicle in a parking lot and can access your car this way, he can go to your home and rob it while you’re shopping or standing in the parking lot wondering where your car is.

Dan Darius

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

It’s a shame that cops are always reactive instead of proactive.

Dan Darius
Dee Ouchman

It’s a ordinary Tesla coil which energised the door lock/unlock servo.

Justa Joe

I don’t need a fresh car that badly. My two thousand five Ford Concentrate has manual (mechanical) doorlocks, manual (forearm crank) windows, and a 5-speed manual transmission. Its also carrying 275,000 miles on the odometer.

I’m in no fear of anyone attempting to steal my wheels.

Marc M

Yes, we have the exact same car – two thousand five Ford Concentrate. Looks like a ruddy ordnance vehicle, but I like it because it has NOTHING (except AC). Manual trans, windows, everything. And a freakin’ metal key. I do not like this fresh crap. “The more the over-think the plumbing, the lighter it is to stop up the drain,” in the words of Scotty. And every tour to the stealership to fix the over-thought under-engineered geek fucktoys is an exercise on your wallet.

This is finish rubbish. The rolling code protocol (keyloq) used by keyless entry will only permit two hundred fifty six code attempts before the original key will need to be reset. This is a hoax.

George Johnson

Evidently the cops are NOT one step ahead of the criminals.

Starheart

There are too many COPS that ARE the CRIMINALS OUT THERE.

pithypaul

The thief is going to sue for invasion of his own privacy, as nobody asked him for permission to use his photo. Hey, this is Amerika.

SMARTERTHANYOU

Wow.. these reporters, especially the police department, are frankly imbeciles! The technology is over a decade old, it’s called a laptop and a receiver.

Starheart

Homeland Security Personnel are using very advanced electronic technology to hack into everything now.

People like Kay Griggs, Michael Hastings, Phillip Marshall, Judi Bari and myself have been targeted by some of these these special ops Homeland Security personnel involved in criminal operations in the US. They have been promoting and rewarding war criminals for years from the CIA and Military Black Sites and Torment Facilities, into Homeland Security, FBI, Law Enforcement, and other government agencies across the country, to target citizens for surveillance and crimes.

(Witness Kay Griggs movies on you tube, as she gives her testimonial for what has been going on for a long time now.)

Since 2011, I’ve been targeted for surveillance burglaries, vandalism, pet torment, vehicle tampering as well as the planting of stolen and unknown origin property and malicious prosecution. My safe deposit box in, Colville, WA ,was even burglarized. I can’t find any organization to help me, out of the dozens and dozens of civil and constitutional rights organizations and attorneys I’ve contacted. I had to get a private investigator to trace license plates and find out who some of the people involved in these targeted black operations are.

I can’t get my FOIA Requests fulfilled for information on my surveillance “Watch List” targeted crimes and it’s even common skill in Washington state that Homeland Security personnel are involved in my targeted surveillance and gang stalking crimes. There has even been one out of court settlement in one case in the Seattle area for these criminal activities by Homeland Security Personnel.

My cruise control stopped working on my one hundred forty mile tour back from Spokane WA, on Thursday February 26th (about two weeks ago), and I was gang stalked on the road by numerous vehicles (one of them with a Big Transformer Decal on the Back Window, one with a Big US “Infantry” sticker on his back window, as well as by WA license plate # WEPLAY2) and after they all turned off and I got past Colville, WA, I attempted my cruise control again and it began working. I know they have had remote control over my car alarms on my vehicles for a long time now, and it looks to me that they can also remote control my cruise control as well now……

They have been using FOIA DENIALS, FOIA APPEAL DENIALS, GAG ORDERS, NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS AND EVEN – “CLASSIFYING” INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COVER UP THEIR CRIMES AGAINST TARGETED INDIVIDUALS, ACTIVISTS AND JOURNALISTS.

See: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car, Q13 FOX News

Observe: Thief uses mysterious electronic device to lightly open locked car

SEATTLE — A West Seattle man is sharing a surveillance movie that shows the panicking way thieves are using technology to break into cars.

Witness the movie as a man approaches Tom Dahl’s truck in this driveway. He attempts the treat, but the door is locked. So he takes off his backpack, moves it close to the window. Seconds later, he’s able to get inwards.

Photo Gallery

“He opens the door up,” says Dahl. “The lights went on, it was disarmed.”

Dahl is glad the thief didn’t take his truck. All he did was rummage through the contents of his glove compartment.

“I was clever enough not to carry anything of value in there. That’s what he was looking for.”

But Dahl is worried about how the thief got in so lightly.

“You used to have a wire that you glided down the window, when it was mechanical. But now it’s electronic.”

Cases like this are becoming more common across the region.

Lars Carlson says the man who broke into his car in January also appeared to be carrying something in a backpack.

“It’s running through codes automatically or it’s a button they’re pushing or something is happening. But whatever it does, it seems to trick the car into thinking he’s got the legitimate keys.”

Seattle police say they don’t know exactly what kind of device thieves are using, or how it works. But they are worried.

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

Dahl says automakers need to do something to give people a little more security. But until that happens, he’s going to share this movie with as many neighbors as he can.

“I hope other people pay attention, make sure things are secure and locked, and don’t keep things in your car that are of any value.”

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

thirty two comments

Slam1263 (@IKnowBO)

It is just a random code transmitter.

They can transmit a million codes with the thrust of a button.

Tow truck driver have been using them for over twenty years.

Don’t the receivers limit the number of failed attempts per 2nd?

Sadly No they don’t

Rodger Wolkins

They need to emit a cloud of pepper unload after three failed attempts.

Fresh Fellow

Then cars in parking lots would permanently be admitting pepper squirt, in a parking lot hundreds of remote keys are used permanently, so it has to be able to see signals without assuming it is failed attempts. They need to increase the complexity of the codes, add more bits, make it too hard to crack.

ashford
lionfan

Can very likely take the entire damn car if it uses keyless ignition, right?

Testicules

For most cars, the thief would still have to deal with the mechanical steering lock that is released by the mechanical portion of the key.

As for some cars that now have keyless thrust button begin features… ?

clovellstc

The car permanently scans for the key. Since this is most likely just a device and sends out a bunch of signals in a row he wouldn’t know which one was for the car, so I doubt it would work on the ignition.

Phillip Coiner

I know how they are doing it. Have the cops send me an e-mail

john Bowler

Observe a classic Forrest Whitaker film “Ghost Dog”. The hero uses one of those code generators to steal luxury cars.

So, They may steal them from Tow Truck Drivers?

Tester

The device works by “pinging” the FOB on the key chain which, in turn, generates a signal to the vehicle. The device only works when the keys are within operational range of the vehicle.

Frank

This techbology isn’t fresh, over a decade old if anything. They demonstrated this in the movie, ‘Gone in sixty Seconds’.

Device is available on aliexpress from china for $600 or less. Clones key fobs and can transmit them. It’s not a mystery.

Thats not how they work. You need access to the original keys and the car to make a clone.

Most people keep their registration and garage door opener in their car. If a thief witnesses you leave your vehicle in a parking lot and can access your car this way, he can go to your home and rob it while you’re shopping or standing in the parking lot wondering where your car is.

Dan Darius

“As technology adapts, criminals adapt,” says police Capt. Eric Sano. “We have to be one step ahead of the criminals and to figure it out.”

It’s a shame that cops are always reactive instead of proactive.

Dan Darius
Dee Ouchman

It’s a plain Tesla coil which energised the door lock/unlock servo.

Justa Joe

I don’t need a fresh car that badly. My two thousand five Ford Concentrate has manual (mechanical) doorlocks, manual (palm crank) windows, and a 5-speed manual transmission. Its also carrying 275,000 miles on the odometer.

I’m in no fear of anyone attempting to steal my wheels.

Marc M

Yes, we have the exact same car – two thousand five Ford Concentrate. Looks like a ruddy ordnance vehicle, but I like it because it has NOTHING (except AC). Manual trans, windows, everything. And a freakin’ metal key. I do not like this fresh crap. “The more the over-think the plumbing, the lighter it is to stop up the drain,” in the words of Scotty. And every journey to the stealership to fix the over-thought under-engineered geek fucktoys is an exercise on your wallet.

This is accomplish rubbish. The rolling code protocol (keyloq) used by keyless entry will only permit two hundred fifty six code attempts before the original key will need to be reset. This is a hoax.

George Johnson

Evidently the cops are NOT one step ahead of the criminals.

Starheart

There are too many COPS that ARE the CRIMINALS OUT THERE.

pithypaul

The thief is going to sue for invasion of his own privacy, as nobody asked him for permission to use his pic. Hey, this is Amerika.

SMARTERTHANYOU

Wow.. these reporters, especially the police department, are frankly imbeciles! The technology is over a decade old, it’s called a laptop and a receiver.

Starheart

Homeland Security Personnel are using very advanced electronic technology to hack into everything now.

People like Kay Griggs, Michael Hastings, Phillip Marshall, Judi Bari and myself have been targeted by some of these these special ops Homeland Security personnel involved in criminal operations in the US. They have been promoting and rewarding war criminals for years from the CIA and Military Black Sites and Torment Facilities, into Homeland Security, FBI, Law Enforcement, and other government agencies across the country, to target citizens for surveillance and crimes.

(See Kay Griggs movies on you tube, as she gives her testimonial for what has been going on for a long time now.)

Since 2011, I’ve been targeted for surveillance burglaries, vandalism, pet torment, vehicle tampering as well as the planting of stolen and unknown origin property and malicious prosecution. My safe deposit box in, Colville, WA ,was even burglarized. I can’t find any organization to help me, out of the dozens and dozens of civil and constitutional rights organizations and attorneys I’ve contacted. I had to get a private investigator to trace license plates and find out who some of the people involved in these targeted black operations are.

I can’t get my FOIA Requests fulfilled for information on my surveillance “Watch List” targeted crimes and it’s even common skill in Washington state that Homeland Security personnel are involved in my targeted surveillance and gang stalking crimes. There has even been one out of court settlement in one case in the Seattle area for these criminal activities by Homeland Security Personnel.

My cruise control stopped working on my one hundred forty mile tour back from Spokane WA, on Thursday February 26th (about two weeks ago), and I was gang stalked on the road by numerous vehicles (one of them with a Big Transformer Decal on the Back Window, one with a Big US “Infantry” sticker on his back window, as well as by WA license plate # WEPLAY2) and after they all turned off and I got past Colville, WA, I attempted my cruise control again and it began working. I know they have had remote control over my car alarms on my vehicles for a long time now, and it looks to me that they can also remote control my cruise control as well now……

They have been using FOIA DENIALS, FOIA APPEAL DENIALS, GAG ORDERS, NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENTS AND EVEN – “CLASSIFYING” INFORMATION IN ORDER TO COVER UP THEIR CRIMES AGAINST TARGETED INDIVIDUALS, ACTIVISTS AND JOURNALISTS.

Related movie:

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*
*
Website