On April 17, 2012, officers from the Fresno Police Department began to receive the silent LoJack signal on the LoJack Police Tracking Computers installed in their patrol vehicles. After querying the “Reply Code” on the PTC display with the police stolen vehicle computer systems, the officers were notified that the signal was emanating from a

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On April 24, 2012, the owner of a 2006 Acura TL parked and locked his vehicle on the street where he lives in the Park Slope section of Brooklyn. When he returned for it, he found it missing and contacted the New York Police Department’s 78th Precinct to report the theft. NYPD officers completed a

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On April 24, 2012, Ventura Police Department patrol officers received a text message from the Port Hueneme Police Department regarding a stolen vehicle. Thirteen minutes later, the officers picked up the silent LoJack homing signal from the stolen 2008 Dodge Avenger, on their onboard LoJack Police Tracking Computer (PTC). Following the directional and signal strength

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On April 18, 2012, Rialto Police Department officers were traveling northbound on Riverside Avenue just north of Valley Boulevard, when they picked up a silent LoJack homing signal on their patrol car’s LoJack Police Tracking Computer (PTC). After querying the “Reply Code” appearing on the PTC against the police stolen vehicle database, they were informed

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When the owner of a BMW 750 LI discovered that her vehicle had been stolen on the evening of April 13, 2012, she immediately reported the theft to the San Diego Police Department.  It was the police department’s routine entry of the vehicle information into the nationwide law enforcement stolen vehicle computer system that automatically

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On April 21, 2012, the owner of a 1995 Jeep Grand Cherokee discovered that the vehicle had been stolen, and immediately reported the theft to the San Diego Police Department. San Diego Police completed a stolen vehicle report and had the Jeep’s information entered into the state and federal crime computers. This routine police action

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On April 14, 2012, an Arizona man allegedly trying to commit insurance fraud was caught after the LoJack transponder installed in his 2007 Dodge Magnum alerted investigators to his crime. Earlier – and unaware that the vehicle was equipped with LoJack – the suspect had reported the vehicle stolen to the Huntington Park Police Department

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