LATEST NEWS
April 9, 2009
Heavy Equipment
Keen-eyed Con-Ker worker helps recover $1 million in stolen construction equipment
Close to $1 million in stolen construction equipment has been recovered in Flamborough, Ontario, thanks to the sharp eye of a Con-Ker Construction driver and a little bit of luck.
“Most of the equipment has been missing already for about two to three weeks,” explains George Kleinsteiber, equipment theft consultant for the Ontario Sewer and Watermain Construction Association. “There are indications the equipment was being re-VIN’d and readied to be shipped to Africa. We are extremely lucky to have recovered them.”
On March 27 a driver working for Con-Ker Construction saw what he believed to be two John Deere bulldozers his company had recently reported stolen. The heavy equipment was hidden behind some trees in a yard belonging to Suzan Equipment Sales, 2135 Hwy Number 6, in Flamborough.
Hamilton police were called to the location and secured it. With the assistance of the Peel Regional Commercial Auto Crime Unit, Halton Regional Police and Kleinsteiber, a search warrant was executed the next day.
Investigators recovered at the yard three dump trucks, two bulldozers, an excavator, a quad-axle trailer and parts of a tri-axle float trailer.
The equipment belonged to Con-Ker Construction, Dom-Meridian Construction, non-OSWCA members and yet to be identified owners.
Further investigation by Peel police’s auto crime unit identified a customs broker in Mississauga that was preparing to ship the stolen equipment to Africa.
Charges against a number of individuals will be laid soon and attempts are being made to determine if other stolen heavy equipment is presently enroute to Africa.
“Most of North America’s stolen heavy equipment seems to head to Africa. The equipment gets driven and loaded right on to row-row ships and then is gone,” says Kleinsteiber.
Heavy equipment theft amounts to a $32 million tab across Canada annually and a majority of that theft occurs in Ontario and Quebec, says Kleinsteiber.
Ontario alone accounts for $12 to $16 million of that theft. This year equipment theft in the Greater Toronto Area, Ottawa, Montreal and Vancouver is on the rise but down overall in Canada, Kleinsteiber says.
There have been few highlights in the recovery of stolen equipment in 2009 until the Flamborough area recovery.
Installation of an immobilizer or tracking system of some kind on equipment will help deter theft, he adds.
Kleinsteiber is the author of OSWCA’s Combatting Heavy Equipment Theft, An Officers’ Guide to Proper Identification of Construction Equipment.
The guide is designed to assist law enforcement officers in the location of vehicle/product identification numbers (VIN/PIN) on construction equipment such as excavators, backhoe loaders, skid steer loaders and mini-excavators.
OSWCA asks that people keep an eye out for new Case skidsteers because nine were recently stolen from equipment supplier Strongco’s Mississauga location.
Also, if your company had equipment stolen in the past year, in the GTA, you can contact Kleinsteiber who is working with the police on the Flamborough recovery, at 705-791-8000.
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