| Construction equipment thefts prove
nothing's too big to steal |
| Pittsburgh Post-Gazette | 7/17/2005 |
The National Equipment Register, an organization that provides information
on heavy equipment theft and ownership, estimates that construction theft
costs companies between $300 million and $1 billion a year. In its 2004
Equipment Theft Report the Register reported thirty-eight percent of all
equipment theft in the country took place within the borders of only five
states -- Texas, North Carolina, California, Florida and Pennsylvania. |
| They Even Stole a
Backhoe in Broad Daylight |
| New York Times BUSINESS/FINANCIAL DESK | 1/6/2005 |
Construction site thefts, sometimes committed by the people working there,
cost the industry nearly $1 billion annually despite antitheft efforts like
offering rewards to people who turn in thieves. |
| Proven Tracking Record |
| GPS World | 10/1/2004 |
Dynamic Duo -- More than 60 law enforcement agencies across the United
States have leveraged GPS/cellular tracking devices to catch vehicle and
mobile equipment thieves. Vehicle theft in one U.S. county reportedly
dropped 30 percent following the devices' use. |
| Uniform Crime Report |
| Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) | 11/1/2003 |
Every 24 seconds, another vehicle is stolen in the United States. Every
minute, 20 property crimes (robbery, burglary, larceny-theft and motor
vehicle theft) are committed. |