Los Angeles police found what remained of a black Porsche 911 Carrera Cabriolet on the street and, for a moment at least, the description "Porsche 911" did not obviously fit what was sitting there.
The hood was gone. The bumpers were gone. The front fenders were gone. Both doors, the rear deck, the engine cover, the retractable roof, every lighting unit — all gone. What sat on the road was a bare chassis with the scuff plates still attached, which was actually useful information: it confirmed this was a base Carrera trim rather than one of the more expensive variants.
When photos circulated online, Carscoops reports, viewers initially debated whether it was a kit car or a stripped Mazda MX-5. It was only the shape of the pedal assembly and the proportions of the rear decklid that gave it away as a 992-generation 911.
The interior had been taken with the same thoroughness. Seats gone. Steering wheel gone. Instrument cluster, infotainment, dashboard, centre console, audio system, airbags, seatbelts — the lot. The thieves left the chassis and the VIN plate, which is both the most identifiable part of the car and the least saleable.
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The economics of stripping a Porsche
This is not opportunistic theft. This is a business.
A 992 Porsche 911 Carrera Cabriolet retails new at around $130,000 to $140,000. Stripped and sold as individual components, the same car generates considerably more. The engine alone commands serious money on the grey market. PDK gearboxes, front axle assemblies, the retractable roof mechanism, airbag modules, genuine Porsche infotainment units — each part has a buyer. Owners of damaged or 91 written off by insurerss, independent repair shops, and private buyers unwilling to pay Porsche main dealer parts prices all represent demand.
The operation that gutted this car was not a smash and grab. It required transport, tools, time and knowledge of which components are worth taking and which are not. The scuff plates stayed. The chassis stayed. Everything with a resale market left on a van.
The owner has been notified and the investigation is ongoing, according to The Supercar Blog, which confirmed authorities have established it was a stolen Porsche.
The GPS tracker problem
The natural response to a car theft story like this is: why didn't the tracker work? Owners of expensive vehicles routinely fit GPS devices for precisely this kind of scenario. The answer, as this case illustrates, is that a tracker tells you where the car is, not what condition it is in. By the time police located what remained of this 911, the useful information the tracker could provide had been exhausted. The car had been found. What had been done to it in the interim was irretrievable.
Professional stripping operations have adapted. Working fast on a public street, potentially with a lookout, the thieves removed everything of value before any response was possible. The police found a chassis. The parts were already somewhere else.
This is not the first time LA has seen this kind of organised automotive theft and it will not be the last. The city's combination of ownership of expensive vehicles, relatively mild weather that keeps expensive vehicles parked outdoors, and thriving grey market parts networks makes it fertile ground for operations like this one.
The 911 shape is one of the most distinctive in the world. Sixty years of continuous production have made it globally recognisable. On a Los Angeles street last week, someone reduced that icon to something passersby thought might be a Mazda. That is either a damning commentary on the state of car crime in the city or a backhanded tribute to just how thoroughly a professional team can disassemble a Porsche.
Possibly both.
Sources:
- Carscoops — LA Thieves Stripped A Porsche So Bare That Bystanders Thought It Was A Mazda
- The Supercar Blog — Sports car to scrap: Thieves stripped down a Porsche 911 beyond recognition