On the evening of February 29, 2012, a Denver police officer on routine patrol picked up the silent LoJack signal from a stolen vehicle in his vicinity on the LoJack Police Tracking Computer (PTC) installed in his patrol car.  When he queried the code appearing on the PTC against the police computer database, he was

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When the owners of a 2000 Jeep Cherokee discovered that their vehicle had been stolen on the morning of January 23, 2012, they immediately reported the theft to the Denver Police Department.  It was the police department’s routine entry of the Jeep’s information into the nationwide law enforcement stolen vehicle computer system that automatically activated

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While on routine patrol on the morning of January 10, 2012, officers with the Denver Police Department picked up the silent LoJack homing signals from a 2009 Kia Rio reported stolen a shorttime earlier to the Federal Heights Police Department.  Following the directional and signal strength cues on the Police Tracking Computers installed in their

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Lexus Stolen in Colorado Located in Good Condition

  • February 5, 2012
  • recovery stories

On January 20, 2012, while on routine patrol, a Colorado State Patrol Trooper began to pick up a silent LoJack signal on the Police Tracking Computer (PTC)  installed in his patrol car. When he queried the code on the PTC with the national police computer database, he was informed that the distrress signals were coming from

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On January 6, 2012, the owners of a 2000 Toyota RAV-4 discovered the vehicle missing and contacted the Denver Police Department to report the theft.  The Denver Police responded to the scene, prepared a stolen vehicle report and had the stolen Toyota’s information entered into the state and federal crime computers. This routine police action

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