
Hyundai Creta, Fortuner, Maruti Brezza: This family gang stole 25 SUVs in Delhi in past 1 year, 3 held
Family gang of 3 stole 25 SUVs in 10 months, held
NEW DELHI: Stealing high-end SUVs from upscale areas in Delhi and selling them became a family operation for a 56-year-old man and his son and son-in-law over the past 10 months. All of them have been arrested.
The trio didn't include anyone else in the gang to prevent any information leak, said police. Using sophisticated tools to bypass vehicle security systems, they managed to steal 20-25 SUVs over this period and sold them illegally through receivers based in Meerut, Uttar Pradesh.
After studying the pattern and timing of the thefts and analysing CCTV footage from various cases, police found that the gang primarily operated during the early hours of the day, targeting three specific types of SUVs—Hyundai Creta, Fortuner and Maruti Brezza—usually stationed near parks and gyms.
The footage showed them disabling, starting and stealing the vehicles in five to seven minutes, often taking only a few seconds to gain entry.
Deputy commissioner of police (Dwarka) Ankit Singh said during the investigation, around 200 CCTV cameras were reviewed. Footage revealed that a car was repeatedly seen trailing the stolen vehicles in multiple incidents. Acting on a tipoff, police laid a trap near a drain in Uttam Nagar and arrested Raman, a resident of Rohini, along with his son Sagar, as they arrived in a white car with a fake numberplate.
by Taboola
by Taboola
Sponsored Links
Sponsored Links
Promoted Links
Promoted Links
You May Like
Pinga-Pinga e HBP? Tome isso 1x ao dia se tem mais de 40 anos
Portal Saúde do Homem
Clique aqui
Undo
The vehicle was found to be stolen.
Upon searching the car, police recovered several tools commonly used for car theft, including two car scanners, one hand clip with wire, two key connectors, one engine control module, two hammers, six lock T tools, a wire cutter, a cutting plier, twelve keys and two numberplates.
Interrogation revealed that Raman and Sagar were part of a family-based gang in Delhi, which also included Neeraj, Raman's son-in-law, who was arrested later.
Records showed that Raman was involved in 18 such cases, Sagar in 12 and Neeraj in 14. The accused admitted to stealing 20-25 SUVs.
Raman, identified as the gang's kingpin, explained that he formed this close-knit, family-only gang to avoid leaks and prevent infiltration by unknown associates. Their unique modus operandi involved using sophisticated tools to exploit the vehicles' onboard diagnostic ports. These ports, typically used by authorised technicians to diagnose vehicle systems, were manipulated by the gang to disable security systems and steal the cars.
New Delhi: Stealing high-end SUVs from upscale areas in Delhi and selling them became a family operation for a 56-year-old man and his son and son-in-law over the past 10 months. All of them have been arrested.
The trio didn't include anyone else in the gang to prevent any information leak, said police. Using sophisticated tools to bypass vehicle security systems, they managed to steal 20-25 SUVs over this period and sold them illegally through receivers based in Meerut, Uttar Pradesh.
After studying the pattern and timing of the thefts and analysing CCTV footage from various cases, police found that the gang primarily operated during the early hours of the day, targeting three specific types of SUVs—Hyundai Creta, Fortuner and Maruti Brezza—usually stationed near parks and gyms. The footage showed them disabling, starting and stealing the vehicles in five to seven minutes, often taking only a few seconds to gain entry.
Deputy commissioner of police (Dwarka) Ankit Singh said during the investigation, around 200 CCTV cameras were reviewed. Footage revealed that a car was repeatedly seen trailing the stolen vehicles in multiple incidents. Acting on a tipoff, police laid a trap near a drain in Uttam Nagar and arrested Raman, a resident of Rohini, along with his son Sagar, as they arrived in a white car with a fake numberplate. The vehicle was found to be stolen.
Upon searching the car, police recovered several tools commonly used for car theft, including two car scanners, one hand clip with wire, two key connectors, one engine control module, two hammers, six lock T tools, a wire cutter, a cutting plier, twelve keys and two numberplates.
Interrogation revealed that Raman and Sagar were part of a family-based gang in Delhi, which also included Neeraj, Raman's son-in-law, who was arrested later.
Records showed that Raman was involved in 18 such cases, Sagar in 12 and Neeraj in 14. The accused admitted to stealing 20-25 SUVs.
Raman, identified as the gang's kingpin, explained that he formed this close-knit, family-only gang to avoid leaks and prevent infiltration by unknown associates. Their unique modus operandi involved using sophisticated tools to exploit the vehicles' onboard diagnostic ports. These ports, typically used by authorised technicians to diagnose vehicle systems, were manipulated by the gang to disable security systems and steal the cars.
Follow more information on
Air India plane crash in Ahmedabad here
. Get
real-time live updates
on rescue operations and check
full list of passengers onboard AI 171
.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Time of India
25 minutes ago
- Time of India
What Minnesota shooting suspect Vance Luther Boelter's Facebook, LinkedIn profiles revealed
Minnesota shooting suspect Vance Boelter's wife Jenny was questioned by the police. The social media accounts of 57-year-old Vance Luther Boelter, Facebook and LinkedIn, offer many a clues about his work and association as he emerges as the main suspect in the killing of Democratic Minnesota state representative Melisa Hortman and her husband Mark Hortman. Boelter impersonated as a police officer and shot them dead. Boelter also shot state senator John Hoffman and his wife Yvette Hoffman, at their home. They are injured. Boelter had a hit list of politicians, abortion providers Police said they found a manifesto and hit list in Boelter's car. The list has names of politicians, abortion providers and pro-abortion right advocates. There were 'No Kings Day' posters in his car. Boelter's Facebook profile Before it was taken town, WIRED briefly reviewed a Facebook profile linked with Boelter. His profile liked several evangelical missionary organizers, as well as pages honoring Reinhard Bonnke, a German pentecostal evangelist known for missions in several African countries, and Smith Wigglesworth, a British evangelist who was influential in the pentecostal movement. He also 'liked' the Alliance Defending Freedom, a conservative legal advocacy organization known for its hardline stances against abortion and LGBTQ rights. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Memperdagangkan CFD Emas dengan salah satu spread terendah? IC Markets Mendaftar Undo Boelter's LinkedIn profile Vance Luther Boelter's LinkedIn profile According to his LinkedIn profile, Boelter is a veteran of food industry and was looking for work. His bio said he worked for ohnsonville Sausage, Del Monte, and the Irish convenience food manufacturer Greencore; recently, he posted that he was looking to return to that sector. In 2019, Minnesota governor Tim Walz appointed him to a Workforce Development Board in the capacity of a 'business and industry representative.' He also served as chair on the Dakota-Scott Workforce Development Board for over a decade, but resigned last year. Boelter's wife Jenny Boelter was detained and questioned after cops found a weapon, ammunition, cash and passports in her car during a traffic stop Saturday morning. She was driving the car with several relatives sitting inside. The couple reportedly ran a security company together -- Praetorian Guard Security. Jenny was the President CEO of the company and was billed as bringing 'years of organizational operations and logistical oversight,' according to the company's website. It is not yet clear whether the couple lived separately.


Time of India
an hour ago
- Time of India
Portion of Rs 80 crore under-construction bridge collapses in Madhya Pradesh's Shivpuri; 6 labourers injured
A portion of an under-construction overbridge collapsed in Shivpuri district in Madhya Pradesh on Sunday, leaving six labourers injured, an official said. The incident took place at 1pm near a bus stand and railway level crossing along Pohri highway, he added. "No one was working below the portion that collapsed, which averted major casualties. The six injured labourers have been hospitalised. They were laying concrete on the bride, which is being built at a cost of Rs 80 crore," he said. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Kulkas yang belum Terjual dengan Harga Termurah (Lihat harga) Cari Sekarang Undo He said the Madhya Pradesh Public Works Department ( MPPWD ) has given the bridge building contract to a firm called Subham Construction , they added. The company's construction quality control official Praveen Pandey told reporters the accident occurred due to a technical fault. Live Events "Excessive vibration was applied beyond permissible limits, causing the structure to become unstable and collapse," he said. Kotwali police station in charge Kripal Singh Rathore said a a notice has been issued to the construction agency. "A technical investigation is underway. Legal action will be taken based on the findings," Rathore added.


Time of India
an hour ago
- Time of India
UK PM Keir Starmer orders national enquiry: From Elon to enquiry – a brief history of Pakistani grooming gangs in Great Britain
After years of public outcry, multiple local reviews, and political hesitation, the UK government has announced a full national statutory inquiry into grooming gangs and institutional failures that enabled decades of child sexual exploitation. The decision, announced by Prime Minister Keir Starmer on June 14, marks a dramatic shift in tone for his administration—one that had previously resisted demands for a public investigation into what many see as one of Britain's worst safeguarding scandals. The tipping point? A perfect storm of political pressure, survivor testimony, community backlash—and unusually, a global spotlight powered by Elon Musk , who used his platform, X (formerly Twitter), to repeatedly target Starmer's record on grooming gangs. The Case That Refused to Disappear Elon Musk and Nigel Farage The term 'grooming gangs' refers to loosely organised groups of men who exploited underage girls—typically white, working-class, and often in care—in towns across northern England from the early 1990s onwards. The 2014 Jay Report on Rotherham, commissioned after investigative journalism exposed widespread abuse, identified over 1,400 victims between 1997 and 2013. Similar patterns were later uncovered in Rochdale, Telford, Oxford, and Oldham. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Trading CFD dengan Teknologi dan Kecepatan Lebih Baik IC Markets Mendaftar Undo What made the cases especially sensitive was the ethnic background of many offenders—in several high-profile cases, the perpetrators were men of Pakistani Muslim heritage. However, the official framing used the broader term 'Asian grooming gangs'—a euphemism that triggered resentment among British Indians, Sikhs, and East Asians who said their communities were being unfairly implicated. "We Are Not the Perpetrators": British-Indians Push Back British-Indian communities, especially Hindus and Sikhs, have long objected to the blanket use of the term 'Asian grooming gangs.' Their frustration boiled over in January this year when Starmer, in response to criticism from Elon Musk, once again used the phrase during a televised interview. Community leaders issued sharp statements denouncing what they called an ethnic smear. 'Why should we be classified as part of these gangs?' asked Jay Shah, spokesperson for Friends of India Society International UK. 'Asian means Vietnamese, Sri Lankan, Japanese, Indian, etc. When it comes to grooming gangs, we are Asian. When it comes to Kashmir, we are Indian.' The Hindu Council UK called Starmer's wording a 'whitewash of heinous atrocities,' noting that Hindu and Sikh girls had also been among the victims. Sikh Youth UK, which has documented grooming cases involving Sikh victims for over 15 years, said it had worked with thousands of families and even caught perpetrators outside Sikh schools. The Network of Sikh Organisations described Starmer's comments as 'extremely disappointing' and accused politicians of 'protecting perpetrators rather than victims.' Both the Hindu Council UK and INSIGHT UK have since backed Conservative calls for a national inquiry—arguing that political correctness has too often silenced honest debate about ethnicity and crime. From Tech CEO to Relentless Critic The turning point came not from Westminster but from Silicon Valley. In early 2025, Elon Musk—whose X platform has grown into a global political amplifier—began posting repeatedly about grooming gangs. Quoting survivor testimonies, reposting historical reporting, and tagging British officials, Musk accused UK authorities of 'turning a blind eye to organised rape' and suggested that political leaders, including Starmer, were 'cowards unwilling to confront the truth.' One post from March read: 'If these were elite London girls being trafficked, the BBC would talk about nothing else. But poor northern girls? The state looked away.' While the tone of Musk's commentary sparked debate—especially among British politicians who viewed it as inflammatory—it undeniably brought renewed international attention to the issue. By May, Musk's X account had posted or amplified over 150 messages about grooming gangs, triggering renewed media coverage, a spike in search interest, and thousands of public responses. Hashtags such as #JusticeForRotherham, #GroomingGangsInquiry, and #StarmerFailedUs trended across the UK and US. Political Pressure Closes In The growing visibility added fuel to a debate already brewing in Parliament. In January, Home Secretary Yvette Cooper had quietly commissioned Baroness Louise Casey to conduct a 'rapid review' into previous investigations—including Oldham and Rochdale—after persistent claims that public officials downplayed or ignored evidence of abuse. Casey's report, delivered in May, was damning. It found that multiple public bodies 'failed in their duty of care' and that in some cases, victims were dismissed or even blamed. Crucially, it called for a full statutory public inquiry with the ability to compel testimony and evidence. Simultaneously, Conservative MPs, Reform UK leaders, and victim advocacy groups demanded action. Former Home Secretary Suella Braverman, a long-time critic of the 'Asian gangs' terminology, stated that Starmer had 'run out of excuses.' Reform UK leader Nigel Farage called the lack of a national inquiry 'a betrayal of Britain's daughters.' Starmer Responds On June 14, Keir Starmer announced the establishment of a judge-led inquiry under the 2005 Inquiries Act, which gives it full legal powers. He said the investigation would 'examine past failures, hold institutions to account, and ensure this can never happen again.' Starmer, who previously served as Director of Public Prosecutions, defended his record, pointing to a rise in grooming-related prosecutions during his tenure. But critics argue that his earlier reluctance to endorse a national inquiry allowed the issue to fester—and exposed Labour to accusations of institutional denial. 'There is no more denying the scale of failure,' Starmer said at a press conference. 'This inquiry is about justice—for survivors, for their families, and for the country.' Why a Statutory Inquiry Matters Unlike previous reviews—many of which lacked transparency and enforcement—this inquiry has legal teeth. It can: Subpoena witnesses, including former officials, police officers, and social workers; Demand the release of classified documents and internal reports; Take testimony from survivors in private or public; Recommend structural reforms for law enforcement, social services, and public communication. For many survivors, this is the first time they feel their voices might lead to actual accountability. What Happens Next The inquiry will take several months to set up, with hearings likely to begin in early 2026. Its findings could reshape the way Britain handles child protection, race relations, and public accountability. But in the short term, it's already had an impact: Musk's involvement, while controversial, showed how digital platforms can force action on long-ignored issues. Starmer's government is now under pressure to implement swift reforms and offer compensation to survivors. The political debate has sharpened, with opposition parties vowing to make grooming gangs a central issue in the next election. Final Word This is not just a story of abuse—it's a story of institutional failure, political caution, and the new ways power is exercised across borders and platforms. Whether the inquiry delivers justice remains to be seen. But for the thousands of girls whose pain was ignored—and for the communities wrongly smeared along the way—this is a reckoning long overdue.