Motoring @ AsiaOne

3 vehicles broken into: Use of master key suspected

Nothing amiss on the outside, but it was obvious from looking inside 2 lorries & a van that they had been ransacked.
Khushwant Singh

Tue, Jul 24, 2007
The Straits Times

Nothing was amiss on the outside, but it was obvious from looking inside two lorries and a van that they had been ransacked.

The owners told police that they had locked their vehicles after parking at the Block 867 multi-storey car park in Woodlands Drive 73 on Tuesday night.

The next day, they discovered that CashCards and cash worth a total of $250 were missing.

Police said that there were no signs of forced entry.

Workshop managers told The Straits Times that this usually indicates that a master key was used to get into the vehicles.

"Cars usually have theft alarms that will sound if a master key is used, so thieves now target goods vehicles which are not equipped with these devices," said Mr Tan Ah Eng, who manages a workshop in Jurong.

The 52-year-old workshop owner said that unless someone had the spare remote locking control device, it would be very difficult to unlock a car without activating the alarm.

He said: "Usually thieves just smash a window to steal from cars.

"But with lorries and other goods vehicles, someone with about 20 master keys
can usually find one that fits the lock."

 
 
 
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