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Author Topic: Volkswagen van turns up in cargo container, 35 years after it was stolen.  (Read 449 times)
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boogieman
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« on: November 06, 2009, 05:55:21 pm »

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Customs agents inspecting a load bound for the Netherlands discovered a 1965 van that disappeared from a Spokane repair shop in 1974. CHP investigators are searching for the thieves.

When U.S. Customs and Border Protection agents at the Port of Los Angeles opened a shipping container bound for the Netherlands, they discovered a 1965 Volkswagen bus stolen in Washington state 35 years ago.

Far out, man!

The unusual seizure of the bus on Oct. 19 came during a routine inspection of several Volkswagens that were being shipped by an Arizona restorer to customers in Europe. The vehicle identification number of the bus, which was swiped in Spokane on July 12, 1974, was still in police computers.

"Pretty amazing, isn't it?" customs spokesman Jaime Ruiz said Thursday when the find was announced.

The restorer, who was not identified, isn't a suspect in the long-ago theft, authorities said.

"He's a victim himself. He was an innocent purchaser," said Mike Maleta, an investigator with the California Highway Patrol, who will attempt to trace the vehicle's ownership back through interviews and registration documents.

"I'm going to try my best to find the crook," he said.

Groovy.

Maleta said Spokane police couldn't find the owner.

"Allstate paid her $2,500 or so to settle the claim," he said. "Now it's worth $25,000. . . . It's in pristine condition. It looks like it's brand new. So Allstate wanted it."

Bummer.

  http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-stolen-bus6-2009nov06,0,5595923.story


  If i was the current seller of it, I would be so pissed.


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tanya2012
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« Reply #1 on: November 07, 2009, 07:00:41 am »

Wow I would be pissed too. It looks pretty amazing. I can haz?
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boogieman
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« Reply #2 on: November 12, 2009, 03:42:38 am »

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SPOKANE, Wash. — Michele Squires once owned the 1965 Volkswagen van that was found recently in a shipping container at a Southern California port — 35 years after she had it stolen from a repair shop.

She'd now like to buy it back.

Squires told The Spokesman-Review that she was watching television news on Friday when a picture of a VW van popped up on the screen during a story about how customs agents on Oct. 19 discovered the vehicle in a shipping container headed for the Netherlands. The blue-and-white van looked to be in pristine condition, and could be worth more than $25,000.

Customs officials ran the vehicle identification number and found it had been reported stolen from an upholstery shop in Spokane on July 12, 1974. Squires said she had taken the van to the shop to have a bed made in the back for camping.

Squires, 58, is a lifelong Spokane-area resident who has worked at a Chinese restaurant for the past 30 years.

Her memory of buying the van is a little hazy. She wrecked her previous car and received $600 in settlement, and used that toward the van, though she doesn't remember the price. She remembers having a lot of fun in the van, hauling friends from home to home for progressive dinners and on ski trips.

"It was great in the snow," she said. "Lousy heater. I kind of fell in love with it."

After the van was stolen, Squires was paid off by the insurer, Allstate Insurance Co., which then became the legal owner. When it turned up at the Los Angeles seaport, officials seized it and turned it over to the insurance company.

The van had likely changed owners several times over the years. Most recently, it had been in the hands of a custom repair shop in Arizona, which refurbishes VWs and sells them overseas. Authorities say the owners of the shop are not considered suspects in the long-ago theft.

Squires has contacted Allstate to see if she could get the van back. Before she came forward, a company spokeswoman said Allstate would have the car appraised, apply for a new title and sell it at auction.

Asked Monday if Allstate would try to sell or return the car to Squires, the spokeswoman said the company was still investigating its options.

Squires said she probably cannot afford to buy back the van if it is worth $25,000 or more, as the auto theft investigator on the case has guessed. But she would at least like the first chance at purchasing it, she said.


http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5i8r1-lYf4HMgntJdcCDBz7UnqdLwD9BSPRK04


What bullshit. They are actually considering giving the bus back to her?  They paid her off 35 years ago, therefore she won't lose anything by not getting the bus they rightfully own back.

 What about the guy that restored it? It had to cost $10k+ to restore it... Why not give him the chance to buy it back for the $2k it cost the insurance company in 1974.

  Essentially, They are profiting off of someone elses work. Screwing someone over in the process. rolleyes
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Morbid_much
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« Reply #3 on: November 12, 2009, 04:40:57 am »

That must suck for the people that restored it.

They should at least pay them back the money that they spend on restoring it. The insurance company is the legal owner of a van that's worth 2000 or so...not a van that's worth 25000.

If i restored that van and they would just give it back to the owner who already got 2000 for it...god i'd be so pissed off.

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