logo
Most motor vehicle thefts in America happen in this state, data shows

Most motor vehicle thefts in America happen in this state, data shows

Yahoo11-03-2025

The Brief
New data reveals California leads the nation in motor vehicle thefts with 195,875 incidents.
Texas and Washington follow, with Texas reporting 124,483 thefts primarily from residences.
Most of the car thefts occurred in residential areas and on highways.
LOS ANGELES - California leads the nation in motor vehicle theft rates in 2023, according to a recent data analysis.
The study, conducted by 0-60 Specs using data from the FBI Crime Data Explorer, also highlighted specific locations within each state where cars are most at risk.
By the numbers
In California, a staggering 195,875 cases were reported. This figure is 856.33% above the national average of 20,481.88 car thefts.
According to the data, vehicles in California are most vulnerable when parked on highways, roads, alleys, streets, and sidewalks, accounting for 48,585 of the reported cases.
Texas follows as the second-highest state for vehicle theft, with 124,483 cases, marking a 507.77% increase over the national average. In Texas, 44,568 thefts occurred at residences or homes.
Washington ranks third, with 53,066 cases of vehicle theft, a 159.09% increase over the national average. Cars in Washington are most at risk at residences or homes, with 19,335 cases reported.
Illinois is fourth, with 41,514 reported cases, a 102.69% increase over the national average. Highways, roads, alleys, streets, and sidewalks are the most targeted areas in Illinois, with 24,766 thefts recorded.
Colorado rounds out the top five, with 37,955 reported cases of auto theft in 2023, an 85.31% increase over the national average. In Colorado, 14,484 cars were stolen from parking lots, drop lots, or garages.
What we know
Data was gathered from the FBI Crime Data Reporter to determine which states had the most reported motor vehicle thefts in 2023.
The national average was calculated based on the number of reports from all 50 states.
What we don't know
While the data reveals the states with the highest theft rates, it does not provide information on the reasons behind these high rates or the effectiveness of measures being taken to combat vehicle theft in these areas.
What they're saying
"The latest data highlights a concerning rise in motor vehicle thefts across several states, with California leading by a significant margin," said Emir Bacic, owner of 0-60 Specs. "The trends suggest that certain locations—such as highways, residential areas, and parking lots—pose the greatest risk for car owners. These findings show the importance of heightened security measures, including anti-theft devices and strategic parking choices, to mitigate the growing threat of auto theft."
The Source
Information for this story is from FBI crime data via 0-60 specs.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

A bid for bail by former New Jersey US Sen. Menendez is rejected by appeals court as prison looms
A bid for bail by former New Jersey US Sen. Menendez is rejected by appeals court as prison looms

Associated Press

time43 minutes ago

  • Associated Press

A bid for bail by former New Jersey US Sen. Menendez is rejected by appeals court as prison looms

NEW YORK (AP) — A bid for bail by former U.S. Sen. Robert Menendez while he appeals his bribery conviction was rejected Wednesday by a federal appeals court, a week before the veteran New Jersey politician is scheduled to report to prison. Menendez, 71, was convicted last July of selling his clout for bribes. FBI agents who searched his home three years ago found $480,000, some of it stuffed inside boots and jacket pockets, gold bars worth an estimated $150,000 and a luxury convertible in the garage. Prosecutors said that in exchange, Menendez performed corrupt favors for the New Jersey business owners. They said he tried to protect the men and associates from criminal investigations, helped two in business deals with foreign powers and met with Egyptian intelligence officials before helping that country access $300 million in U.S. military aid. Menendez, a Democrat, has insisted that he is innocent and is seeking to overturn his conviction. He is scheduled to surrender to federal prison authorities on Tuesday. A three-judge panel on the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals denied his bail motion in a brief order issued Wednesday. The decision did not include a rationale, but it said one of the three judges would have granted the motion. An email seeking comment was sent to his attorneys. Menendez, who once served as chair of the influential Senate Foreign Relations Committee, resigned his seat a month after his conviction. He had been in the Senate since 2006. Two business owners also were convicted last year along with Menendez. His wife, Nadine Menendez, was convicted in April of teaming up with her husband to accept bribes from the business owners. Her trial was delayed after she was diagnosed with breast cancer and required surgery. Her sentencing has been set for Sept. 11.

FBI accuses Green Twp. man of detonating homemade bombs in woods across Greater Cincinnati
FBI accuses Green Twp. man of detonating homemade bombs in woods across Greater Cincinnati

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

FBI accuses Green Twp. man of detonating homemade bombs in woods across Greater Cincinnati

The FBI arrested a Green Township man this week they say is responsible for detonating homemade explosives in wooded areas across Greater Cincinnati. Robert Gilb, 50, was arrested June 10 by the FBI's Joint Terrorism Task Force after agents connected Gilb to at least three explosions in Hamilton and Butler counties. The federal investigation began in April after Hamilton County sheriff's deputies responded to a loud explosion and white smoke in a wooded area off East Miami River Road in Cleves. There, deputies found a small pipe, a small piece of wire and 10 batteries housed together in the radius of 50 feet, according to a sheriff's office incident report. The FBI took over the investigation and connected it to two similar explosions in Butler County a month earlier. Butler County sheriff's deputies told the FBI in March they went to a neighborhood in Okeana, a small unincorporated community off State Route 126, for a dispute between neighbors. The dispute followed an explosion nearby similar to the one in Cleves. Then, days later, a witness to another explosion nearby reported seeing a white BMW parked prior to the detonation. Authorities learned Gilb was the owner of that BMW. After talking to "multiple witnesses," a federal agent wrote in court documents Gilb was identified as a person involved in construction explosives. Gilb faces charges of possession of an unregistered destructive device and transporting explosive materials without a permit, according to court records. Those are federal crimes punishable by up to 10 years in prison, Acting U.S. Attorney Kelly Norris said in a news release. Gilb is expected next in federal court in Cincinnati on June 12 at 1:30 p.m. before Magistrate Judge Karen Litkovitz. This article originally appeared on Cincinnati Enquirer: FBI: Green Twp. man blew up homemade bombs in Cincinnati-area woods

CIA analyst who leaked Israeli military plans gets three years in prison
CIA analyst who leaked Israeli military plans gets three years in prison

Washington Post

timean hour ago

  • Washington Post

CIA analyst who leaked Israeli military plans gets three years in prison

A former CIA analyst who leaked highly classified records about Israeli plans for a military strike on Iran, which spread quickly through social media last year, was sentenced Wednesday to three years and one month in prison. Asif W. Rahman pleaded guilty to two counts of violating the Espionage Act, admitting that he leaked more than a dozen classified documents while working as a CIA analyst. He was arrested last year after FBI investigators traced the download of two records detailing Israeli military preparations to Rahman's workstation at the U.S. Embassy in Phnom Penh, Cambodia.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store