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Wikipedia

Carjacking

Carjacking is a robbery in which the item taken over is a motor vehicle.[1][2] In contrast to car theft, carjacking is usually in the presence and knowledge of the victim.[2] A common crime in many places in the world, carjacking has been the subject of legislative responses, criminology studies, and prevention efforts. Commercial vehicles such as trucks and armored cars containing valuable cargo are common targets of carjacking attempts. Carjacking usually involves physical violence to the victim, or using the victim as a hostage. In rare cases, carjacking may also involve sexual assault.[3]

A sign warning of carjacking activities along a stretch of road in Gauteng, South Africa

Etymology

The word is a portmanteau of car and hijacking. The term was coined by reporter Scott Bowles and editor EJ Mitchell with The Detroit News in 1991.[4][5] The News first used the term in a report on the murder of Ruth Wahl, a 22-year-old Detroit drugstore cashier who was killed when she would not surrender her Suzuki Sidekick, and in an investigative report examining the rash of what Detroit Police call "robbery armed unlawful driving away an automobile" (in dispatch slang shortened to R.A.-YOU-Da) plaguing Detroit.[6]

Studies

A study published in the British Journal of Criminology in 2003 found that "for all of the media attention it has received in the United States, Europe and elsewhere, carjacking remains an under-researched and poorly understood crime."[7] The authors conducted semi-structured interviews with 28 active carjackers in St. Louis, Missouri, and based on these interviews concluded that "the decision to commit a carjacking stems most directly from a situated interaction between particular sorts of perceived opportunities and particular sorts of perceived needs and desires, this decision is activated, mediated, and shaped by participation in urban street culture."[7]

A study published in the Journal of Contemporary Ethnography in 2013 noted that "carjacking requires offenders to neutralize victims who are inherently mobile and who can use their vehicles as both weapons and shields." The study noted that carjackers use fear to compel compliance from victims.[8]

A 2008 paper by the Australian Institute of Criminology conceptualized carjackings as falling into four types based on method and motive: organized and instrumental, organized and acquisitive, opportunistic and instrumental, and opportunistic and acquisitive. An example of an organized and instrumental carjacking is a planned carjacking with a weapon to use the vehicle for ramming an ATM to steal cash. An example of an organized and acquisitive carjacking is a planned carjacking to sell the vehicle in a known market. An example of an opportunistic and instrumental carjacking is a carjacking without a weapon to sell "vehicle/parts with no market in mind." An example of an opportunistic and acquisitive carjacking is a carjacking without a weapon to joyride.[9]

A 2017 qualitative study published in Justice Quarterly examined auto theft and carjacking in the context of "sanction threats" that promoted fear and influenced "crime preferences" among criminals, thereby redirecting ("channeling") criminal activity. The study showed that "auto thieves are reluctant to embrace the violence of carjacking due to concerns over sanction threat severity they attributed to carjacking—both formal (higher sentences) and informal (victim resistance and retaliation). Meanwhile, the carjackers are reticent to enact auto theft because of the more uncertain and putatively greater risk of being surprised by victims, a fear that appears to overcome the enhanced long-term formal penalty of taking a vehicle by force."[10]

Prevention and response

Common carjacking ruses include: (1) bumping the victim's vehicle from behind, and taking the car when the victim gets out of the vehicle to assess damage and exchange information; (2) staging a fake car accident, sometimes with injuries, and stealing the vehicle of a passerby who stops to assist; (3) flashing lights or waving to get the victim's attention, indicating that there is a problem with the victim's car, and then taking the car once the victim pulls over; and (4) following a victim home, blocking the victim's car in a driveway or in front of a gate.[11]

Police departments, security agencies, and auto insurers have published lists of strategies for preventing and responding to carjackings.[11][12][13] Common recommendations include:

  • Staying alert and being aware of one's surroundings[11][12]
  • Parking in well-lighted areas[12][13]
  • Keeping vehicle doors locked and windows up[11][12]
  • Avoiding unfamiliar or high-crime areas[11][12]
  • Alerting police as soon as is safely possible following a carjacking[11][12]
  • Avoid isolated and less-well-trafficked parking lots, ATMs, pay phones, etc.[11][12][13]
  • When stopped in traffic, keeping some distance between the vehicle in front, so one can pull away easily if necessary.[11][12]
  • If confronted, it is often safer to give up the vehicle and avoid resisting[11][12]
  • Use of the vehicle as a weapon against the car jacker, or a firearm or pepper spray.

Truck carjacking

Commercial vehicles such as trucks and armored cars may be targets of carjacking attempts.[14] Such carjackings may be aimed at stealing cargo,[14] such as liquor, cigarettes, valuable goods, consumer electronics or even drugs.[15] In other cases, a carjacked truck may be used to commit another crime, such as robbery or a terrorist attack.[14]

Knowledge of the location of a truck carrying valuable cargo often requires inside information, and sometimes truck drivers collude with truck carjackers to facilitate the truck carjacking.[15] This crime is often perpetuated by organized crime operations or by career criminals, or by a collaboration between the two.[16] In particular, La Cosa Nostra has been known to orchestrate the carjacking of trucks (at locations such as Kennedy Airport in which a truck driver under Mafia influence allows carjackers to steal the truck).[17][18]

In the United States in 2019, over 2,600 truck thefts occurred with the average value of a trailer contents being $148,000.[19]

Incidents by country

South Africa

Carjacking is a significant problem in South Africa, where it is called hijacking.[20] South Africa is thought to have the highest carjacking rate in the world.[21] There were 16,000 reported carjackings in 1998.[20] The figures dropped to 12,434 reported carjackings in 2005,[20] and continued to drop until the 2011–12, when the number of carjackings was 9,475, a record low.[22] Subsequently, however, carjackings increased as part of an overall increase in violent organized crime, which the Institute for Security Studies attributed to poor police leadership. There were 11,221 reported carjackings in 2014. More than half of all carjackings in South Africa occurred in Gauteng province, which includes Johannesburg and Pretoria.[22]

The carjacking issue in South Africa was depicted in the film Tsotsi, which won the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film in 2005.[22]

In the late 1990s and early 2000s, several new, unconventional anti-carjacking systems designed to harm the attacker were developed and marketed in South Africa, where carjacking had become endemic. Among these was the now defunct Blaster, a small flame-thrower that could be mounted to the underside of a vehicle.[23]

United States

Federal Anti-Car Theft Act of 1992

In 1992, Congress, in the aftermath of a spate of violent carjackings (including some in which the victims were murdered), passed the Federal Anti-Car Theft Act of 1992 (FACTA), the first federal carjacking law, making it a federal crime (punishable by 15 years to life imprisonment) to use a firearm to steal "through force or violence or intimidation" a motor vehicle that had been shipped through interstate commerce.[1][2] The 1992 Act, codified at 18 U.S.C. § 2119, took effect on October 25, 1992.[24][25] However, only a small number of federal prosecutions were imposed for carjacking the year after the act was enacted, in part because many federal carjacking cases were turned over to state prosecutions because they do not meet U.S. Department of Justice criteria.[24] The Federal Death Penalty Act, part of the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994, an omnibus crime bill, made sixty new federal crimes punishable by the federal death penalty; among these were the killing of a victim in the commission of carjacking.[1][25][26]

Throughout 1993, articles about carjackings appeared at the rate of more than one a week in newspapers throughout the country.[27] The November 29, 1992, killing of two Osceola County, Florida, men by carjackers using a stolen 9 mm pistol resulted in the first federal prosecution of a fatal carjacking.[28]

Prevalence and statistical analysis

According to the National Crime Victimization Survey (NCVS) conducted by the U.S. Department of Justice's Bureau of Justice Statistics, from 1993 to 2002, some 38,000 carjackings occurred annually.[29] According to the survey, over this time period men were more often victims than women, blacks more than whites, and Hispanics more than non-Hispanics.[29] 56% of carjackers were identified by victims as black, 21% white, 16% Asian or Native American, and 7% mixed race or unknown.[29] Some 93% of carjackings occurred in urban areas.[29][30]

There were multiple carjackers in 56% of incidents, and the carjacker or carjackers were identified as male in 93% of incidents. A weapon was used in 74% of carjacking victimization: firearms in 45%, knives in 11%, and other weapons in 18%. Victims were injured in about 32% of completed carjackings and about 17% of attempted carjackings. Serious injuries, such as gunshot or knife wounds, broken bones, or internal injuries occurred in about 9% of incidents. About 14 murders a year involved car theft, but not all of these were carjackings. Some 68% of carjackings occurred at nighttime hours (6 p.m. to 6 a.m.). Some 98% of completed carjackings and 77% of attempted carjackings were reported to police. About 44% of carjacking incidents occurred in an open area (e.g., on the street or near public transportation) while 24% occurred in parking lots or garages or near commercial places (e.g., stores, gas stations, office buildings, restaurants/bars).[29]

According to the NCVS, from 1992 and 1996, about 49,000 completed or attempted nonfatal carjackings took place each year in the United States. The carjacking was successful in about half of the incidents. Data on fatal carjackings are not available; "about 27 homicides by strangers each year involved automobile theft," but not all of these were carjackings.[31]

In particular cities

Carjackings were common in Newark, New Jersey, in the 1990s, and a wave of carjackings took place again in 2010.[32] There were 288 carjackings in the city in 2010 (a 70% increase from the previous year), and Essex County (which includes Newark) had 69 in December 2010 alone.[32] The Associated Press reported that "unlike previous carjackings, in which thieves would strip vehicles for parts or sell them in other states, the recent wave perplexed law enforcement officials because almost all appeared to be done by thrill-seeking young men who would steal the cars for a few hours, drive them around and then abandon them."[32] After federal, state, and law enforcement agencies formed a task force, 42 suspects were charged, and carjackings dropped dramatically.[32] However, national media attention on carjackings in Essex County returned in December 2013, when a Hoboken lawyer was murdered at The Mall at Short Hills in Millburn, New Jersey, while defending his wife from four assailants,[33][34][35] who were all later convicted of the crime.[36]

For several years (but no longer), the major U.S. city with the highest rates of carjacking was Detroit.[37] In 2008, Detroit had 1,231 carjackings, more than three a day.[37] By 2013, that number had fallen to 701, but this was still the highest known number of carjackings for any major city in the country.[37] The significant decrease in carjackings was credited to a coordinated effort by the Detroit Police Department, the FBI, and the local federal prosecutor's office.[37] Serial carjackers were targeted for federal prosecutions and longer sentences, and in 2009 the Detroit Police Department centralized all carjacking investigations and developed a suspect profiling system.[37] Through mid-November 2014, Detroit had 486 carjackings, down 31% from the year before, but this was still three times more than the carjackings experienced by New York City (which has ten times Detroit's population) in all of 2013.[37] Even James Craig, chief of police of the Detroit Police Department, was the victim of an attempted carjacking while he was in his police cruiser.[37]

A 2017 study used "Risk Terrain Modeling" analysis to identify spatial indicators of carjacking risk in Detroit. The analysis identified six factors that "were influential in the best fitting model: proximity to service stations; convenience/grocery/liquor stores; bus stops; residential and commercial demolitions; and areas with high concentrations of drug arrests and restaurants." The study found that certain locations in Detroit "had an expected rate of carjacking that was 278 times higher than other locations."[38]

As of 2021, the American city with the highest number of carjackings is Chicago. Chicago began experiencing a surge in carjackings after 2019, and at least 1,415 such crimes took place in the city in 2020.[39] According to the Chicago Police Department, carjackers are using face masks that are widely worn due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic to effectively blend in with the public and conceal their identity. 2021 saw a further increase to a 20-year high of over 1,800 carjackings.[40] On January 27, 2021, Mayor Lori Lightfoot described the worsening wave of carjackings as being 'top of mind,' and added 40 police officers to the CPD carjacking unit.[41]

Many other cities have seen a similar increase in carjackings since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic. Over 500 carjackings were recorded in New York City in 2021, compared to 328 in 2020 and 132 in 2019. Likewise, the police department of Philadelphia reported over 800 in 2021, compared to 170 in 2015. 281 carjackings occurred in New Orleans in 2021 while 105 occurred there in 2018,[40] while Oakland reported 301 carjackings in 2020 and 521 carjackings in 2021.[42]

State law

Some states have a specific carjacking statute. Other states do not have a specific carjacking law, and prosecute carjackers under the general robbery statute.[43]

The law of some states, such as Louisiana, explicitly lists a killing in the course of defending oneself against forcible entry of an occupied motor vehicle as a justifiable homicide.[1][44][45]

United Kingdom

Carjacking is an uncommon crime in Britain, making up about 1% of all vehicle thefts.[9]

Australia

Australia does not specifically record the number of carjackings; such crimes are variously recorded as assault, robbery, motor vehicle theft, and some combination. However, a 2008 paper by the Australian Institute of Criminology, analyzing police and insurance records, suggested that fewer than 300 carjackings occur annually in Australia (about 0.5% of all theft incidents in the country).[9] The paper noted that the low incidence of carjacking compared to the United States is attributable to the low rate of firearm-related crime in Australia and the fact that the "broader socioeconomic picture of Australian society is one of relative good health in terms of wealth distribution and social cohesion" providing little motivation for victimization that is "both personal and violent."[9] The paper notes that although carjacking was rare, isolated hot spots do arise occasionally, and that since the late 1990s, "Sydney has experienced a number of carjacking clusters ... each lasting around three to six months and occurring in different locations including the eastern suburbs, the inner city and the south-west."[9]

Philippines

The Philippine National Police keeps a record on the number of incidents of index crimes in the Philippines including carjacking.[46][47] The act of carnapping, as it is known in the country, is penalized under the Anti-Carnapping Act of 2016. [48]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d Michael Cherbonneau, "Carjacking," in Encyclopedia of Social Problems, Vol. 1 (SAGE, 2008: ed. Vincent N. Parrillo), pp. 110-11.
  2. ^ a b c Jacobs, Bruce A.; Cherbonneau, Michael (2023). "Carjacking: Scope, Structure, Process, and Prevention". Annual Review of Criminology. 6 (1). doi:10.1146/annurev-criminol-030421-042141. ISSN 2572-4568.
  3. ^ "Charges: Man sexually assaulted woman during Minneapolis carjacking turned kidnapping". fox9.com.
  4. ^ Pulitzer, Lisa Beth. Crime On Deadline. New York, New York: Boulevard Books, 1996
  5. ^ Bowles, Scott (August 29, 1991). "Carjacking: Who's at Risk?". The Detroit News.
  6. ^ The Detroit News, August 28, 1991
  7. ^ a b Bruce A. Jacobs, Volkan Topalli & Richard Wright, "Carjacking, Streetlife and Offender Motivation" in The British Journal of Criminology, Vol. 43, Issue 4 (October 2003), pp. 673–688.
  8. ^ Bruce Jacobs, "The Manipulation of Fear in Carjacking" in Journal of Contemporary Ethnography, Vol. 42, Issue 5 (February 2013), pp. 523-544.
  9. ^ a b c d e Lisa Jane Young and Maria Borzycki, Carjacking in Australia: recording issues and future directions 2017-12-04 at the Wayback Machine, Trends & Issues in Crime & Criminal Justice, No. 351, Australian Institute of Criminology, February 2008.
  10. ^ Bruce A. Jacobs & Michael Cherbonneau, "Perceived Sanction Threats and Projective Risk Sensitivity: Auto Theft, Carjacking, and the Channeling Effect," Justice Quarterly (March 2017), pp. 1-32.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h i Carjacking—Don't be a Victim, U.S. Department of State, Bureau of Diplomatic Security (August 2002).
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h i NOPD crime prevention: How to avoid being carjacked, New Orleans Police Department.
  13. ^ a b c Preventing Carjacking / Theft, Insurance Information Institute.
  14. ^ a b c Truck Hijacking Prevention Fact Sheet 2011-07-17 at the Wayback Machine, Texas Department of Insurance.
  15. ^ a b Ronald F. Becker & Aric W. Dutelle, Criminal Investigation (4th ed.: Jones & Bartlett, 2013), p. 303.
  16. ^ Frank E. Hagan, Introduction to Criminology: Theories, Methods, and Criminal Behavior (6th ed.: SAGE Publications, 2008), p. 287.
  17. ^ Carl Sifakis, The Mafia Encyclopedia (3d ed.: Facts on File: 2005), p. 195.
  18. ^ Jay S. Albanese, Organized Crime in Our Times (6th ed. 2011: Routledge, 2015 ed.), pp. 202-03.
  19. ^ Taylor-Lehman, Dylan (2020-04-23). "The Pirates of Highways". Narratively. Retrieved 2020-04-24.
  20. ^ a b c Rory Caroll, Carjacking: the everyday ordeal testing South Africa, Guardian (March 2, 2006).
  21. ^ Linda Davis, Carjacking — Insights from South Africa to a New Crime Problem, Australian & New Zealand Journal of Criminology, Vol. 35, Issue 2, 2003, pp. 173-191.
  22. ^ a b c Erin Conway-Smith, Carjackings are on the rise again in South Africa, GlobalPost (May 27, 2015).
  23. ^ "Flamethrower now an option on S. African cars". CNN. December 11, 1998.
  24. ^ a b Mike Folks, Carjacking Law Getting Little Use: Few Prosecutions Occur Despite Increase in Number of Cases, Sun-Sentinel (January 17, 1994).
  25. ^ a b 18 U.S.C. § 2119.
  26. ^ Amy D'Olivio, "Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act" in Encyclopedia of Law Enforcement (Sage, 2004: eds. Larry E. Sullivan et al.), p. 896.
  27. ^ "Carjacking Reports Increase In Area -- Police Told Of Five Incidents Over Thanksgiving Holiday." Seattle Times, Saturday, November 26, 1994
  28. ^ Henry Pierson Curtis, Youths Steal Guns To Steal Youths' Lives; The Gun Used In The Nation's First Federal Carjacking Case Was Bought Legally, Then Stolen, Orlando Sentinel, January 30, 1994.
  29. ^ a b c d e Patsy Klaus, National Crime Victimization Survey, Carjacking, 1993-2002, U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Statistics, July 2004.
  30. ^ Benjamin S. Wright, Motor Vehicle Theft, in Encyclopedia of Street Crime in America (Sage 2010: ed. Jeffrey Ian Ross), p. 271.
  31. ^ Patsy Klaus, Carjackings in the United States, 1992-96, .S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Statistics, March 1999.
  32. ^ a b c d Associated Press, After Dozens of Arrests, Newark Carjackings Decline Sharply, March 21, 2011.
  33. ^ Marc Santora & Annie Correaldec, Man Dies in Carjacking at Short Hills Mall; 2 Suspects Are Sought, New York Times, December 16, 2013.
  34. ^ Michael Schwirtzdec, 4 Suspects Held in Fatal Carjacking at Mall, New York Times, December 21, 2013.
  35. ^ Associated Press, 4 Men Plead Not Guilty in Deadly Mall Carjacking, October 22, 2014.
  36. ^ Joshua Jongsma, Two men plead guilty to roles in fatal Short Hills mall carjacking, NorthJersey.com (October 10, 2017).
  37. ^ a b c d e f g Tresa Baldas, Carjackers losing grip on Detroit, but strike daily, Detroit Free Press (November 30, 2014).
  38. ^ Lersch, Kim Michelle (2017). "Risky places: An analysis of carjackings in Detroit". Journal of Criminal Justice. 52: 34–40. doi:10.1016/j.jcrimjus.2017.07.011.
  39. ^ Jeremy Gorner & Jonathon Berlin, Carjackings more than double in Chicago during 2020, police say, perhaps as criminals blended in with masked public, Chicago Tribune (January 18, 2021).
  40. ^ a b Peter Nickeas and Priya Krishnakumar, 'It's a disturbing trend.' Cities see large increases in carjackings during pandemic, CNN (January 23, 2022).
  41. ^ Gregory Pratt & John Byrne, Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot says spike in carjackings ‘top of mind,’ adding 40 more police officers to carjacking unit and gathering regional mayors, Chicago Tribune (January 27, 2021).
  42. ^ Jeff Parsons, Once willing to defund police, Oakland, Calif. now faces a major violent crime spike, KATV (January 11, 2022).
  43. ^ Auto Theft & Carjacking State Statutes, National Conference of State Legislators (last accessed November 25, 2017).
  44. ^ Associated Press, Louisiana Drivers Given License to Kill (August 14, 1997).
  45. ^ Susan Michelle Gerlin, Louisiana's New "Kill the Carjacker" Statute: Self-Defense or Instant Injustice?, 55 Wash. U. J. Urb. & Contemp. L. 10, (January 1999).
  46. ^ Caliwan, Christopher Lloyd (19 June 2019). "Carnapping cases down 57% in May". Associated Press. Retrieved 11 October 2021.
  47. ^ Marquez, Consuelo (19 June 2019). "Car theft incidents dropped 56.8% in May 2019 — PNP". Philippine Daily Inquirer. Retrieved 11 October 2021.
  48. ^ Ager, Maila (20 July 2016). "Stiffer anti-carnapping law for car owners' peace of mind—Poe". Philippine Daily Inquirer. Retrieved 11 October 2021.

carjacking, confused, with, jack, device, lifting, body, vehicle, jacked, redirects, here, children, novel, jacked, novel, robbery, which, item, taken, over, motor, vehicle, contrast, theft, carjacking, usually, presence, knowledge, victim, common, crime, many. Not to be confused with a car jack a device for lifting up the body of a vehicle Car jacked redirects here For the children s novel see Car Jacked novel Carjacking is a robbery in which the item taken over is a motor vehicle 1 2 In contrast to car theft carjacking is usually in the presence and knowledge of the victim 2 A common crime in many places in the world carjacking has been the subject of legislative responses criminology studies and prevention efforts Commercial vehicles such as trucks and armored cars containing valuable cargo are common targets of carjacking attempts Carjacking usually involves physical violence to the victim or using the victim as a hostage In rare cases carjacking may also involve sexual assault 3 A sign warning of carjacking activities along a stretch of road in Gauteng South Africa Contents 1 Etymology 2 Studies 3 Prevention and response 4 Truck carjacking 5 Incidents by country 5 1 South Africa 5 2 United States 5 2 1 Federal Anti Car Theft Act of 1992 5 2 2 Prevalence and statistical analysis 5 2 3 In particular cities 5 2 4 State law 5 3 United Kingdom 5 4 Australia 5 5 Philippines 6 See also 7 ReferencesEtymology EditThe word is a portmanteau of car and hijacking The term was coined by reporter Scott Bowles and editor EJ Mitchell with The Detroit News in 1991 4 5 The News first used the term in a report on the murder of Ruth Wahl a 22 year old Detroit drugstore cashier who was killed when she would not surrender her Suzuki Sidekick and in an investigative report examining the rash of what Detroit Police call robbery armed unlawful driving away an automobile in dispatch slang shortened to R A YOU Da plaguing Detroit 6 Studies EditA study published in the British Journal of Criminology in 2003 found that for all of the media attention it has received in the United States Europe and elsewhere carjacking remains an under researched and poorly understood crime 7 The authors conducted semi structured interviews with 28 active carjackers in St Louis Missouri and based on these interviews concluded that the decision to commit a carjacking stems most directly from a situated interaction between particular sorts of perceived opportunities and particular sorts of perceived needs and desires this decision is activated mediated and shaped by participation in urban street culture 7 A study published in the Journal of Contemporary Ethnography in 2013 noted that carjacking requires offenders to neutralize victims who are inherently mobile and who can use their vehicles as both weapons and shields The study noted that carjackers use fear to compel compliance from victims 8 A 2008 paper by the Australian Institute of Criminology conceptualized carjackings as falling into four types based on method and motive organized and instrumental organized and acquisitive opportunistic and instrumental and opportunistic and acquisitive An example of an organized and instrumental carjacking is a planned carjacking with a weapon to use the vehicle for ramming an ATM to steal cash An example of an organized and acquisitive carjacking is a planned carjacking to sell the vehicle in a known market An example of an opportunistic and instrumental carjacking is a carjacking without a weapon to sell vehicle parts with no market in mind An example of an opportunistic and acquisitive carjacking is a carjacking without a weapon to joyride 9 A 2017 qualitative study published in Justice Quarterly examined auto theft and carjacking in the context of sanction threats that promoted fear and influenced crime preferences among criminals thereby redirecting channeling criminal activity The study showed that auto thieves are reluctant to embrace the violence of carjacking due to concerns over sanction threat severity they attributed to carjacking both formal higher sentences and informal victim resistance and retaliation Meanwhile the carjackers are reticent to enact auto theft because of the more uncertain and putatively greater risk of being surprised by victims a fear that appears to overcome the enhanced long term formal penalty of taking a vehicle by force 10 Prevention and response EditCommon carjacking ruses include 1 bumping the victim s vehicle from behind and taking the car when the victim gets out of the vehicle to assess damage and exchange information 2 staging a fake car accident sometimes with injuries and stealing the vehicle of a passerby who stops to assist 3 flashing lights or waving to get the victim s attention indicating that there is a problem with the victim s car and then taking the car once the victim pulls over and 4 following a victim home blocking the victim s car in a driveway or in front of a gate 11 Police departments security agencies and auto insurers have published lists of strategies for preventing and responding to carjackings 11 12 13 Common recommendations include Staying alert and being aware of one s surroundings 11 12 Parking in well lighted areas 12 13 Keeping vehicle doors locked and windows up 11 12 Avoiding unfamiliar or high crime areas 11 12 Alerting police as soon as is safely possible following a carjacking 11 12 Avoid isolated and less well trafficked parking lots ATMs pay phones etc 11 12 13 When stopped in traffic keeping some distance between the vehicle in front so one can pull away easily if necessary 11 12 If confronted it is often safer to give up the vehicle and avoid resisting 11 12 Use of the vehicle as a weapon against the car jacker or a firearm or pepper spray Truck carjacking EditCommercial vehicles such as trucks and armored cars may be targets of carjacking attempts 14 Such carjackings may be aimed at stealing cargo 14 such as liquor cigarettes valuable goods consumer electronics or even drugs 15 In other cases a carjacked truck may be used to commit another crime such as robbery or a terrorist attack 14 Knowledge of the location of a truck carrying valuable cargo often requires inside information and sometimes truck drivers collude with truck carjackers to facilitate the truck carjacking 15 This crime is often perpetuated by organized crime operations or by career criminals or by a collaboration between the two 16 In particular La Cosa Nostra has been known to orchestrate the carjacking of trucks at locations such as Kennedy Airport in which a truck driver under Mafia influence allows carjackers to steal the truck 17 18 In the United States in 2019 over 2 600 truck thefts occurred with the average value of a trailer contents being 148 000 19 Incidents by country EditSouth Africa Edit Carjacking is a significant problem in South Africa where it is called hijacking 20 South Africa is thought to have the highest carjacking rate in the world 21 There were 16 000 reported carjackings in 1998 20 The figures dropped to 12 434 reported carjackings in 2005 20 and continued to drop until the 2011 12 when the number of carjackings was 9 475 a record low 22 Subsequently however carjackings increased as part of an overall increase in violent organized crime which the Institute for Security Studies attributed to poor police leadership There were 11 221 reported carjackings in 2014 More than half of all carjackings in South Africa occurred in Gauteng province which includes Johannesburg and Pretoria 22 The carjacking issue in South Africa was depicted in the film Tsotsi which won the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film in 2005 22 In the late 1990s and early 2000s several new unconventional anti carjacking systems designed to harm the attacker were developed and marketed in South Africa where carjacking had become endemic Among these was the now defunct Blaster a small flame thrower that could be mounted to the underside of a vehicle 23 United States Edit Federal Anti Car Theft Act of 1992 Edit See also Murder of Pam Basu In 1992 Congress in the aftermath of a spate of violent carjackings including some in which the victims were murdered passed the Federal Anti Car Theft Act of 1992 FACTA the first federal carjacking law making it a federal crime punishable by 15 years to life imprisonment to use a firearm to steal through force or violence or intimidation a motor vehicle that had been shipped through interstate commerce 1 2 The 1992 Act codified at 18 U S C 2119 took effect on October 25 1992 24 25 However only a small number of federal prosecutions were imposed for carjacking the year after the act was enacted in part because many federal carjacking cases were turned over to state prosecutions because they do not meet U S Department of Justice criteria 24 The Federal Death Penalty Act part of the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994 an omnibus crime bill made sixty new federal crimes punishable by the federal death penalty among these were the killing of a victim in the commission of carjacking 1 25 26 Throughout 1993 articles about carjackings appeared at the rate of more than one a week in newspapers throughout the country 27 The November 29 1992 killing of two Osceola County Florida men by carjackers using a stolen 9 mm pistol resulted in the first federal prosecution of a fatal carjacking 28 Prevalence and statistical analysis Edit According to the National Crime Victimization Survey NCVS conducted by the U S Department of Justice s Bureau of Justice Statistics from 1993 to 2002 some 38 000 carjackings occurred annually 29 According to the survey over this time period men were more often victims than women blacks more than whites and Hispanics more than non Hispanics 29 56 of carjackers were identified by victims as black 21 white 16 Asian or Native American and 7 mixed race or unknown 29 Some 93 of carjackings occurred in urban areas 29 30 There were multiple carjackers in 56 of incidents and the carjacker or carjackers were identified as male in 93 of incidents A weapon was used in 74 of carjacking victimization firearms in 45 knives in 11 and other weapons in 18 Victims were injured in about 32 of completed carjackings and about 17 of attempted carjackings Serious injuries such as gunshot or knife wounds broken bones or internal injuries occurred in about 9 of incidents About 14 murders a year involved car theft but not all of these were carjackings Some 68 of carjackings occurred at nighttime hours 6 p m to 6 a m Some 98 of completed carjackings and 77 of attempted carjackings were reported to police About 44 of carjacking incidents occurred in an open area e g on the street or near public transportation while 24 occurred in parking lots or garages or near commercial places e g stores gas stations office buildings restaurants bars 29 According to the NCVS from 1992 and 1996 about 49 000 completed or attempted nonfatal carjackings took place each year in the United States The carjacking was successful in about half of the incidents Data on fatal carjackings are not available about 27 homicides by strangers each year involved automobile theft but not all of these were carjackings 31 In particular cities Edit Carjackings were common in Newark New Jersey in the 1990s and a wave of carjackings took place again in 2010 32 There were 288 carjackings in the city in 2010 a 70 increase from the previous year and Essex County which includes Newark had 69 in December 2010 alone 32 The Associated Press reported that unlike previous carjackings in which thieves would strip vehicles for parts or sell them in other states the recent wave perplexed law enforcement officials because almost all appeared to be done by thrill seeking young men who would steal the cars for a few hours drive them around and then abandon them 32 After federal state and law enforcement agencies formed a task force 42 suspects were charged and carjackings dropped dramatically 32 However national media attention on carjackings in Essex County returned in December 2013 when a Hoboken lawyer was murdered at The Mall at Short Hills in Millburn New Jersey while defending his wife from four assailants 33 34 35 who were all later convicted of the crime 36 For several years but no longer the major U S city with the highest rates of carjacking was Detroit 37 In 2008 Detroit had 1 231 carjackings more than three a day 37 By 2013 that number had fallen to 701 but this was still the highest known number of carjackings for any major city in the country 37 The significant decrease in carjackings was credited to a coordinated effort by the Detroit Police Department the FBI and the local federal prosecutor s office 37 Serial carjackers were targeted for federal prosecutions and longer sentences and in 2009 the Detroit Police Department centralized all carjacking investigations and developed a suspect profiling system 37 Through mid November 2014 Detroit had 486 carjackings down 31 from the year before but this was still three times more than the carjackings experienced by New York City which has ten times Detroit s population in all of 2013 37 Even James Craig chief of police of the Detroit Police Department was the victim of an attempted carjacking while he was in his police cruiser 37 A 2017 study used Risk Terrain Modeling analysis to identify spatial indicators of carjacking risk in Detroit The analysis identified six factors that were influential in the best fitting model proximity to service stations convenience grocery liquor stores bus stops residential and commercial demolitions and areas with high concentrations of drug arrests and restaurants The study found that certain locations in Detroit had an expected rate of carjacking that was 278 times higher than other locations 38 As of 2021 the American city with the highest number of carjackings is Chicago Chicago began experiencing a surge in carjackings after 2019 and at least 1 415 such crimes took place in the city in 2020 39 According to the Chicago Police Department carjackers are using face masks that are widely worn due to the ongoing COVID 19 pandemic to effectively blend in with the public and conceal their identity 2021 saw a further increase to a 20 year high of over 1 800 carjackings 40 On January 27 2021 Mayor Lori Lightfoot described the worsening wave of carjackings as being top of mind and added 40 police officers to the CPD carjacking unit 41 Many other cities have seen a similar increase in carjackings since the onset of the COVID 19 pandemic Over 500 carjackings were recorded in New York City in 2021 compared to 328 in 2020 and 132 in 2019 Likewise the police department of Philadelphia reported over 800 in 2021 compared to 170 in 2015 281 carjackings occurred in New Orleans in 2021 while 105 occurred there in 2018 40 while Oakland reported 301 carjackings in 2020 and 521 carjackings in 2021 42 State law Edit Some states have a specific carjacking statute Other states do not have a specific carjacking law and prosecute carjackers under the general robbery statute 43 The law of some states such as Louisiana explicitly lists a killing in the course of defending oneself against forcible entry of an occupied motor vehicle as a justifiable homicide 1 44 45 United Kingdom Edit Carjacking is an uncommon crime in Britain making up about 1 of all vehicle thefts 9 Australia Edit Australia does not specifically record the number of carjackings such crimes are variously recorded as assault robbery motor vehicle theft and some combination However a 2008 paper by the Australian Institute of Criminology analyzing police and insurance records suggested that fewer than 300 carjackings occur annually in Australia about 0 5 of all theft incidents in the country 9 The paper noted that the low incidence of carjacking compared to the United States is attributable to the low rate of firearm related crime in Australia and the fact that the broader socioeconomic picture of Australian society is one of relative good health in terms of wealth distribution and social cohesion providing little motivation for victimization that is both personal and violent 9 The paper notes that although carjacking was rare isolated hot spots do arise occasionally and that since the late 1990s Sydney has experienced a number of carjacking clusters each lasting around three to six months and occurring in different locations including the eastern suburbs the inner city and the south west 9 Philippines Edit The Philippine National Police keeps a record on the number of incidents of index crimes in the Philippines including carjacking 46 47 The act of carnapping as it is known in the country is penalized under the Anti Carnapping Act of 2016 48 See also EditAircraft hijacking skyjacking Piracy hijacking of a ship Anti hijack system Car chase Chop shop Containerization Hostage taking Kidnapping Motor vehicle theft Murders of Channon Christian and Christopher Newsom Murder of Joao Helio Murder of Pam Basu Traffic stopReferences Edit a b c d Michael Cherbonneau Carjacking in Encyclopedia of Social Problems Vol 1 SAGE 2008 ed Vincent N Parrillo pp 110 11 a b c Jacobs Bruce A Cherbonneau Michael 2023 Carjacking Scope Structure Process and Prevention Annual Review of Criminology 6 1 doi 10 1146 annurev criminol 030421 042141 ISSN 2572 4568 Charges Man sexually assaulted woman during Minneapolis carjacking turned kidnapping fox9 com Pulitzer Lisa Beth Crime On Deadline New York New York Boulevard Books 1996 Bowles Scott August 29 1991 Carjacking Who s at Risk The Detroit News The Detroit News August 28 1991 a b Bruce A Jacobs Volkan Topalli amp Richard Wright Carjacking Streetlife and Offender Motivation in The British Journal of Criminology Vol 43 Issue 4 October 2003 pp 673 688 Bruce Jacobs The Manipulation of Fear in Carjacking in Journal of Contemporary Ethnography Vol 42 Issue 5 February 2013 pp 523 544 a b c d e Lisa Jane Young and Maria Borzycki Carjacking in Australia recording issues and future directions Archived 2017 12 04 at the Wayback Machine Trends amp Issues in Crime amp Criminal Justice No 351 Australian Institute of Criminology February 2008 Bruce A Jacobs amp Michael Cherbonneau Perceived Sanction Threats and Projective Risk Sensitivity Auto Theft Carjacking and the Channeling Effect Justice Quarterly March 2017 pp 1 32 a b c d e f g h i Carjacking Don t be a Victim U S Department of State Bureau of Diplomatic Security August 2002 a b c d e f g h i NOPD crime prevention How to avoid being carjacked New Orleans Police Department a b c Preventing Carjacking Theft Insurance Information Institute a b c Truck Hijacking Prevention Fact Sheet Archived 2011 07 17 at the Wayback Machine Texas Department of Insurance a b Ronald F Becker amp Aric W Dutelle Criminal Investigation 4th ed Jones amp Bartlett 2013 p 303 Frank E Hagan Introduction to Criminology Theories Methods and Criminal Behavior 6th ed SAGE Publications 2008 p 287 Carl Sifakis The Mafia Encyclopedia 3d ed Facts on File 2005 p 195 Jay S Albanese Organized Crime in Our Times 6th ed 2011 Routledge 2015 ed pp 202 03 Taylor Lehman Dylan 2020 04 23 The Pirates of Highways Narratively Retrieved 2020 04 24 a b c Rory Caroll Carjacking the everyday ordeal testing South Africa Guardian March 2 2006 Linda Davis Carjacking Insights from South Africa to a New Crime Problem Australian amp New Zealand Journal of Criminology Vol 35 Issue 2 2003 pp 173 191 a b c Erin Conway Smith Carjackings are on the rise again in South Africa GlobalPost May 27 2015 Flamethrower now an option on S African cars CNN December 11 1998 a b Mike Folks Carjacking Law Getting Little Use Few Prosecutions Occur Despite Increase in Number of Cases Sun Sentinel January 17 1994 a b 18 U S C 2119 Amy D Olivio Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act in Encyclopedia of Law Enforcement Sage 2004 eds Larry E Sullivan et al p 896 Carjacking Reports Increase In Area Police Told Of Five Incidents Over Thanksgiving Holiday Seattle Times Saturday November 26 1994 Henry Pierson Curtis Youths Steal Guns To Steal Youths Lives The Gun Used In The Nation s First Federal Carjacking Case Was Bought Legally Then Stolen Orlando Sentinel January 30 1994 a b c d e Patsy Klaus National Crime Victimization Survey Carjacking 1993 2002 U S Department of Justice Bureau of Justice Statistics July 2004 Benjamin S Wright Motor Vehicle Theft in Encyclopedia of Street Crime in America Sage 2010 ed Jeffrey Ian Ross p 271 Patsy Klaus Carjackings in the United States 1992 96 S Department of Justice Bureau of Justice Statistics March 1999 a b c d Associated Press After Dozens of Arrests Newark Carjackings Decline Sharply March 21 2011 Marc Santora amp Annie Correaldec Man Dies in Carjacking at Short Hills Mall 2 Suspects Are Sought New York Times December 16 2013 Michael Schwirtzdec 4 Suspects Held in Fatal Carjacking at Mall New York Times December 21 2013 Associated Press 4 Men Plead Not Guilty in Deadly Mall Carjacking October 22 2014 Joshua Jongsma Two men plead guilty to roles in fatal Short Hills mall carjacking NorthJersey com October 10 2017 a b c d e f g Tresa Baldas Carjackers losing grip on Detroit but strike daily Detroit Free Press November 30 2014 Lersch Kim Michelle 2017 Risky places An analysis of carjackings in Detroit Journal of Criminal Justice 52 34 40 doi 10 1016 j jcrimjus 2017 07 011 Jeremy Gorner amp Jonathon Berlin Carjackings more than double in Chicago during 2020 police say perhaps as criminals blended in with masked public Chicago Tribune January 18 2021 a b Peter Nickeas and Priya Krishnakumar It s a disturbing trend Cities see large increases in carjackings during pandemic CNN January 23 2022 Gregory Pratt amp John Byrne Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot says spike in carjackings top of mind adding 40 more police officers to carjacking unit and gathering regional mayors Chicago Tribune January 27 2021 Jeff Parsons Once willing to defund police Oakland Calif now faces a major violent crime spike KATV January 11 2022 Auto Theft amp Carjacking State Statutes National Conference of State Legislators last accessed November 25 2017 Associated Press Louisiana Drivers Given License to Kill August 14 1997 Susan Michelle Gerlin Louisiana s New Kill the Carjacker Statute Self Defense or Instant Injustice 55 Wash U J Urb amp Contemp L 10 January 1999 Caliwan Christopher Lloyd 19 June 2019 Carnapping cases down 57 in May Associated Press Retrieved 11 October 2021 Marquez Consuelo 19 June 2019 Car theft incidents dropped 56 8 in May 2019 PNP Philippine Daily Inquirer Retrieved 11 October 2021 Ager Maila 20 July 2016 Stiffer anti carnapping law for car owners peace of mind Poe Philippine Daily Inquirer Retrieved 11 October 2021 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Carjacking amp oldid 1141592570, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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