Friday, June 13, 2025

New detector identifies stolen vehicles on Mexico City-Cuernavaca highway

Auto theft will reach a record-breaking 94,000 cases in Mexico this year but after two years of what has been perceived as lax enforcement, new efforts are being undertaken in Morelos to curb the crime.

A new operation by the Federal Police and the army has installed a mobile detection unit on the Mexico City-Cuernavaca highway. The vehicle is equipped with a license plate scanner to identify stolen vehicles, allowing security forces to respond immediately.

The detector’s mobility will prevent lawbreakers from evading the scanner because they won’t know where it will be located.

The unit will be moved to different locations around the state of Morelos.

According to the Association of Mexican Insurance Companies (AMIS), auto theft this year will be up 4.4% over last year’s 90,187 cases. The value of the stolen vehicles at the end of November was 14 billion pesos, or US $713 million.

The figure will likely be rather more because December is historically one of the worst months for auto theft.

AMIS general manager Recaredo Arias Jiménez told the newspaper Publímetro that he believes the spike in theft was the result of a relaxation in efforts to combat insecurity during the last two years of President Enrique Peña Nieto’s administration.

Source: Publímetro (sp)

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.
Navy and Profepa authorities inspect bags of dried shark fins in Ensenada, Baja California

Authorities seize over 2 metric tons of illegal shark fins bound for China

0
Navy and environmental inspectors in Ensenada found dozens of bags of dried fins on a ship preparing to set sail for Shanghai.
A person dumps a box of votes onto a table

Irregularities trigger recount in troubled Veracruz elections

0
The June 1 Veracruz election, with both state and judiciary ballots, was troubled from the beginning, with the campaign marred by violence.
Christopher Landau gives a thumbs-up

Stick your visa where? Landau orders cancellation of Mexican social media user’s US visa after crude post

10
After a profanity-laced social media post celebrated anti-ICE protests in Los Angeles, the U.S. State Department sprang into action.