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Shocking moment car thieves use hi-tech gadget to steal £44,000 Mercedes from outside owner's home - as keyless raid is caught on doorbell camera
Shocking moment car thieves use hi-tech gadget to steal £44,000 Mercedes from outside owner's home - as keyless raid is caught on doorbell camera

Daily Mail​

time16-05-2025

  • Daily Mail​

Shocking moment car thieves use hi-tech gadget to steal £44,000 Mercedes from outside owner's home - as keyless raid is caught on doorbell camera

A £44,000 Mercedes was stolen off the driveway of the owner's home after two thieves used a hi-tech gadget to start the motor. The innovative duo used a signal relay device to steal the Mercedes S Class in the middle of the night. Doorbell footage shows one of the men making his way towards the house while the other stood by the car. Mindaugas Grizas, 36, and Lukas Zvirgzdys, 18, successfully stole the car for a mere 12 minutes. When breaking into the vehicle a large engine noise alerted the owner to the theft. The owner of the car called the police from their home located in Breckland, west of Norwich, Norfolk. The call was made at 2:30am on April 7, 2025. Officers for the Norfolk Constabulary stopped the car just 12 minutes later where they found the passenger still wearing a balaclava. Mindaugas Grizas, 36, was sentenced to one year and four months imprisonment and a two year disqualification from driving The device was found in the footwell alongside a GPS jammer that was still transmitting. The duo were arrested at the scene and charged later that day with multiple offences. Grizas from Thetford and Zvirgzdys of Hillburn Road, Wisbech were charged with stealing the car and using apparatus to interfere with wireless telegraphy. The 36-year-old was also charged with driving without insurance and driving while disqualified. The pair appeared at Norwich Magistrates Court the following day where they both pleaded guilty. On May 12, both men appeared in Norwich Crown Court for sentencing. Grizas was sentenced to one year and four months imprisonment and a two year disqualification from driving. Zvirgzdys was jailed for a year, suspended for 18 months, and ordered to carry out 200 hours of community service. Sergeant Gary Morris, of Norfolk Police's Breckland District Crime Unit said: 'This is a timely reminder to take simple steps to keep your vehicle safe.' Keyless technology, once the preserve of expensive high-end vehicles, has become commonplace among more affordable family cars. These gadgets let criminals pick up the signal from a car's keyless fob lying inside the owner's home, and extend this signal to unlock the car and start it. The vehicle's security system is tricked into thinking the key fob is present. He added: 'The easiest thing to do if you have "keyless" technology is to buy a faraday box or pouch which you can get cheaply and easily online. 'This blocks the signal from the keys meaning it can not be picked up by a relay device outside your home.'

Moment keyless car thieves steal Mercedes S Class is caught on doorbell camera
Moment keyless car thieves steal Mercedes S Class is caught on doorbell camera

ITV News

time12-05-2025

  • ITV News

Moment keyless car thieves steal Mercedes S Class is caught on doorbell camera

Watch the men stealing the Mercedes S Class from outside the victim's front door Doorbell camera footage captured two men using a signal relay device to steal a keyless car. The pair used the kit to steal a Mercedes S Class from a driveway at 2.30am on 7 April 2025, but the noise of the engine starting alerted the owner who called police. The car was stopped 12 minutes later when officers found the passenger still wearing a balaclava, with the device in the footwell and a GPS jammer device still transmitting. Footage from the house, in Breckland in Norfolk, shows a man holding a wire loop close to the front door, to amplify the signal from the keyless fob inside the house. When his accomplice starts the car, he backs away and runs to get into the car. Mindaugas Grizas, 36, of Thetford in Norfolk, and Lukas Zvirgzdys, 18, of Wisbech in Cambridgeshire were charged with stealing the car and using apparatus for the purpose of interfering with wireless telegraphy. Grizas was also charged with driving without insurance and driving while disqualified. They both admitted the charges at Norwich Magistrates' Court on 8 April 2025, and were sentenced on Monday. Grizas was jailed for 16 months and disqualified from driving for 24 months, while Zvirgzdys was jailed for a year, suspended for 18 months, and ordered to carry out 200 hours of community service. Sgt Gary Morris, of the Breckland District crime unit, said: 'This is a timely reminder to take simple steps to keep your vehicle safe. "The easiest thing to do if you have 'keyless' technology is to buy a faraday box or pouch which you can get cheaply and easily online. "This blocks the signal from the keys meaning it can not be picked up by a relay device outside your home."

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