GolfGTIforum.co.uk
Model specific boards => Golf mk7 => Topic started by: cossiegaz82 on 01 August 2018, 00:06
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Well I'm pretty gutted to say the least.
I recieved a phonecall from Hertfordshire police this morning at about 11.15 informing me that my house has been broken into and to come back urgently. They smashed my living room window to gain access and ripped my alarm key pad off the wall in an attempt to silence it which failed due to the battery backup. They took nothing but turned my house upside down. The police confirmed that they were looking for the key for my Golf.
This is the 3rd time I've been burgled in the last 18 months, the first time they smashed my house to pieces and caused thousands of pounds worth of damage, the second time they opened the kitchin window and can only assume they saw the alarm sensor and had second thoughts and now today. Each time the police said
it was the car they were after.
I've only had my Golf since march, I had a few facelift mk3 Focus ST's before that. I can't really be bothered with having a nice car now as I can't handle the stress and hassle of all this caper anymore plus I'm a bit worried in case I get broken into while I'm there with my 3 year old daughter which would be terrifying for her as her home should be the one place she should be 100% safe.
So the Golf is now gone and a £600 Seat Leon crap box has taken it's place which I'm really pleased about but at least I haven't got the worry of the car.
Only reason I got a new car is so my daughter has something nice, safe and reliable to travel in but scumbags have forced me back into running bangers again! Barstewards!
Sorry folks, just having a rant! Lol!
Rant mode off!
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@cossiegaz82; That’s terrible :shocked:. In view of what’s happened, I think you’re more than entitled to have a rant.
Unfortunately it seems to be all too common these days, and with the pressure on police resources, the situation is unlikely to improve, so (probably) in most cases, these lowlife thieveing scumbags will continue to get away with it.
It really infuriates me that you work hard to have things like a nice car, only for the lowest form of human life with absolutely no morals whatsoever to come along and think they have an entitlement just to help themselves to your possessions :angry:.
Hopefully you and your family are OK and thankfully, no one was at home when this happened. Easy for me to say, but try to put this awful incident behind you and get on with your life.
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I had the same thought very recently. Scum took my white GTI, entered the house while we slept,never to be seen again and last year took my front end,early evening blatent as you like. My wife is worried they are coming back. Her words.." buy a sh!tter".
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If I ever felt like the car was drawing any unwanted attention, it would be gone in a heartbeat.
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So sorry to hear that cossiegaz, must be awful awful thing to experience :sad:
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That's terrible :(
I can understand your reasoning here, I probably would do the same in similar circumstances.
Hope this fixes your break-in problems.
Chin up mate.
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That's truly awful cossiegaz, what a terrible time you've had and now to have to let go of your pride and joy too. Having to let those scumbags win must really hurt but you certainly have your priorities right. At some point in the future times will have changed and you'll be able to indulge again. :smiley:
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A little off topic, but somewhat related. I was cycling at the weekend and came across a bunch of keys on the road, miles from anywhere. There was a Porsche and BWM key, a mortice lock key, what looked like a garage door key and one of those internet back access keypad things. When I got home I rang 101 to see if they would send someone round to collect them and take some details. They said they wouldn't do that, but I could make a 50 mile round trip to the station and drop them off if I wanted. They would be kept in a drawer, then if not claimed in 28 days, binned. If I wanted to keep them and someone reported them missing, they would put them in touch with me.
Now I don't no about you, but keys like that don't end up on the road in the middle of nowhere without good reason. The likeliest being they were stolen in a break in, but the cars not taken at the time. I'm sure that Porsche and BMW are able to extract owners data from the keys, so even tho' they shouldn't tell me who they belong to, the police ought to be able to find out easily. Someone, somewhere is missing these keys but the police don't seem to be bothered about trying to put 2 and 2 together.
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A little off topic, but somewhat related. I was cycling at the weekend and came across a bunch of keys on the road, miles from anywhere. There was a Porsche and BWM key, a mortice lock key, what looked like a garage door key and one of those internet back access keypad things. When I got home I rang 101 to see if they would send someone round to collect them and take some details. They said they wouldn't do that, but I could make a 50 mile round trip to the station and drop them off if I wanted. They would be kept in a drawer, then if not claimed in 28 days, binned. If I wanted to keep them and someone reported them missing, they would put them in touch with me.
Now I don't no about you, but keys like that don't end up on the road in the middle of nowhere without good reason. The likeliest being they were stolen in a break in, but the cars not taken at the time. I'm sure that Porsche and BMW are able to extract owners data from the keys, so even tho' they shouldn't tell me who they belong to, the police ought to be able to find out easily. Someone, somewhere is missing these keys but the police don't seem to be bothered about trying to put 2 and 2 together.
that's just bad on the polices part, WTH! gees....
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cossiegaz82 - sorry to hear about that. Scumbag is too good a word for them.
dubber36 - sums up the typical response from police these days. I'd ring Porsche & BMW and tell them you have those keys. At the very least it might mean the owners don't have to fork out for replacements. And at best it could help any existing investigations.
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The police stopped handling lost property in a meaningful way a long time ago now - just more budget cuts.
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I think you are all being rather unfair on the police. The simple fact is they don't have the man power they had so things like this (lost/stolen) keys just aren't going to be a priority. They are doing an incredibly difficult job in increasingly difficult circumstances. Lets all be a bit more supportive.
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fredgroves - this is more than 'lost property'. The fact that 2 keys were found together from luxury marques indicates organised crime. Sure the local plod won't be interested in lost keys but if they find their way back to their rightful owners the location of where they were found and when, and that they were together, plus the other bits with them might help an on going investigation.
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Similar thing happened to a friend of mine, he has a golf r estate and has been broken into three times, the last time he was in bed and heard the thieves on his landing, he chased them off but was obviously shaken up. His golf Was on a lease deal and it cost him a lot of money to walk away from the deal and hand the car back but at least he sleeps easier.
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I think you are all being rather unfair on the police. The simple fact is they don't have the man power they had so things like this (lost/stolen) keys just aren't going to be a priority. They are doing an incredibly difficult job in increasingly difficult circumstances. Lets all be a bit more supportive.
I fully agree.
Asked to do more and more new things (some very complex) and with less and less money. Something has to give even if they themselves don't want to back off. The decision is a political one, not one made by the guys on the street who in every case I've ever met have always just wanted to solve crime and make society better.
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How much would it cost to do a search on their data base to see if any reported break ins had certain items taken?
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thats why I have a small tag on my keys with my mobile number.
A little off topic, but somewhat related. I was cycling at the weekend and came across a bunch of keys on the road, miles from anywhere. There was a Porsche and BWM key, a mortice lock key, what looked like a garage door key and one of those internet back access keypad things. When I got home I rang 101 to see if they would send someone round to collect them and take some details. They said they wouldn't do that, but I could make a 50 mile round trip to the station and drop them off if I wanted. They would be kept in a drawer, then if not claimed in 28 days, binned. If I wanted to keep them and someone reported them missing, they would put them in touch with me.
Now I don't no about you, but keys like that don't end up on the road in the middle of nowhere without good reason. The likeliest being they were stolen in a break in, but the cars not taken at the time. I'm sure that Porsche and BMW are able to extract owners data from the keys, so even tho' they shouldn't tell me who they belong to, the police ought to be able to find out easily. Someone, somewhere is missing these keys but the police don't seem to be bothered about trying to put 2 and 2 together.
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How much would it cost to do a search on their data base to see if any reported break ins had certain items taken?
The cost is not the issue, it's man power and priorities. This will be one of 10s if not 100's of thousands of seemingly insignificant reports they will get a year. There just isn't the capability to look at everything as much as you might like them to. Sad, but true. Think about things like the recent visit by Trump. Police forces will have been shunted around the country and stretched to the max to cover that. Cancelled rest days, cancelled leave. Then the ongoing issues around the poisonings. Huge pressure there too. Plus how many murders have there been in London alone this year? Ongoing in depth investigations into potential terrorist plots? The list is truly endless but the resources aren't.
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How long would it take an officer to go to the local BMW garage and hand the keys in and ask for the owners info as they wont /shouldn't give details to Dubber .?I wouldn't think to long and it may help find the scroates who pinched the car.
Cossiegaz So sorry to hear about this , but you and family are ok which is the priority.
Did your neighbours not do anything when the alarm went off ?
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Thanks for the kind words folks :smiley:
It's not all doom and gloom, I always try to put a positive spin on things where I can. Ok so I've had to give up a nice car which I really liked and am now driving something nasty to drive in comparison to my Golf (honestly my work van feels like a damn missile compared to the Leon! Lol!) but I've still got my Sapphire Cossie in the garage and with no more monthly payment to fork out it means my new engine build should come on a bit quicker :cool:
Pinky1959 - my next door neighbour heard the alarm as soon as it went off and went straight out into her back garden, looked over the fence and saw my living room window smashed to bits and called the police straightaway. My neighbours 2 doors up got a good look at the 2 guys that broke in as they saw them run
out of my driveway and get into a BMW 135i before flying down the road like lunatics. The police found the BMW a few miles away crashed and abandoned (obviously their driving skills are about as good as their morals) and turns out the BMW was also stolen and on false plates so obviously car thieves. Bastards :angry:
To be fair to the police, according to my neighbour who called them, they were at my house in minutes so can't complain at that. They missed the thieves by about 4 minutes which is frustrating but hey ho. They were really helpful but am I confident they'll catch them? No not really, scumbags always seem to get away with what they do :angry: I never wish bad things on people but I honestly hope the scumbags die a slow, nasty and agonising death! :angry:
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Have you got CCTV cameras?
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No mate but I'm looking into getting them fitted now.
One of the guys at our local Ford meet does alarms and cctv so I'll have a chat with him once he's back from holiday.
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A little off topic, but somewhat related. I was cycling at the weekend and came across a bunch of keys on the road, miles from anywhere. There was a Porsche and BWM key, a mortice lock key, what looked like a garage door key and one of those internet back access keypad things. When I got home I rang 101 to see if they would send someone round to collect them and take some details. They said they wouldn't do that, but I could make a 50 mile round trip to the station and drop them off if I wanted. They would be kept in a drawer, then if not claimed in 28 days, binned. If I wanted to keep them and someone reported them missing, they would put them in touch with me.
Now I don't no about you, but keys like that don't end up on the road in the middle of nowhere without good reason. The likeliest being they were stolen in a break in, but the cars not taken at the time. I'm sure that Porsche and BMW are able to extract owners data from the keys, so even tho' they shouldn't tell me who they belong to, the police ought to be able to find out easily. Someone, somewhere is missing these keys but the police don't seem to be bothered about trying to put 2 and 2 together.
that's just bad on the polices part, WTH! gees....
Why not drop them into the relevant dealerships.
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Because BMW is a 50 mile round trip and Porsche, nearly 100.