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Stolen 1970 Chevelle SS Recovered After Mysterious Phone Call
Stolen 1970 Chevelle SS Recovered After Mysterious Phone Call

Yahoo

time23-04-2025

  • Automotive
  • Yahoo

Stolen 1970 Chevelle SS Recovered After Mysterious Phone Call

Read the full story on The Auto Wire Thieves, like just about everyone else, absolutely love the 1970 Chevelle SS, so when one was left outside a repair shop in Georgia, it unsurprisingly was stolen. After the daughter of the dying elderly man who owns the classic American muscle car got on the local news, pleading for its return, someone called her anonymously to tip her off on its daughter, Natasha Eckles, took the Chevelle to a local shop for some basic repairs so she could take her father for one last ride. The man loves the Chevy, so realizing that and the fact it's a theft magnet, she told the shop to absolutely not leave it outside overnight. However, the shop owner did just that, apparently because a repair bay was needed for another job. That was a huge mistake. Thankfully, someone who saw the original report on the theft called Eckles telling her they wanted her dad to get that final ride in the Chevelle, she told WSB. While there was a $5,000 reward for information leading to the car's return, offered by the owner of the repair shop, the caller explicitly said he didn't want it. Instead, whoever made the phone call wanted to do the right thing. It's a gesture Eckles appreciated so she could grant her dying father's wish. One might wonder how the caller knew exactly where the stolen classic muscle car was sitting. It's entirely possible the thief or someone who bought the car off the thief realized what they did, felt remorse, and decided to do the right thing. We hate to say it, but that sort of effort to correct a car theft is rare. What kind of a world would we be in if more people who stole vehicles were to realize the damage they've done to innocent people? It would be a great place, that's for sure. Image via WSB-TV/YouTube Join our Newsletter, subscribe to our YouTube page, and follow us on Facebook.

‘Just bring it back': Woman pleads for sick dad's classic car after it was stolen from repair shop
‘Just bring it back': Woman pleads for sick dad's classic car after it was stolen from repair shop

Yahoo

time14-04-2025

  • Automotive
  • Yahoo

‘Just bring it back': Woman pleads for sick dad's classic car after it was stolen from repair shop

She wanted to take her father on one last drive in a classic car that he had handed down to her. But now, the 1970 Chevrolet Chevelle SS is gone. Natasha Eckles said someone stole it from a car repair shop in Forest Park. 'Yeah, I wanted to give that one ride, or I wanted him to ride in that car. That one ride,' Eckles told Channel 2's Tom Jones, holding back tears. Eckles remembers hearing her father arrive home in it even before he got there. 'You could hear my dad coming, like 'vroom, vroom.' Like daddy's coming,' she said. She was elated when he gave her the car. Eckles said it was the star attraction whenever she took it for a ride. 'Everybody wants that car. I can pull my car out to go anywhere and it's gonna get attention,' Eckles said. TRENDING STORIES: Former Georgia Police Academy instructor charged with child molestation 1 dead, 4 in critical condition after crash at busy Atlanta intersection Attorneys reveal settlement amount between Marjorie Taylor Greene's ex-husband, 3 Muslim women It got the wrong kind of attention April 9 around 12:30 that morning. The car was at TJ's Automotive on Jonesboro Road when video surveillance showed someone dropped off near the shop. You see a shadowy figure walk over to Eckles' car. Then the headlights on her prized Chevelle SS come on, and the classic car takes off. 'My heart dropped,' Eckles said after seeing the video. She couldn't believe it when the owner called her and told her it was gone. 'Of course it's gonna be gone. Right. It's an SS Chevelle. It's hot,' Eckles said. She said she specifically requested the owner not leave her car outside. 'You made a promise to me that you didn't keep. You said you would not put my car outside. And you put it outside,' she said. Repair shop owner Tim Jones said he put her car outside that night because he had a transmission job he was doing the next morning and he needed the bay it was in. He admits it was a bad decision. Eckles just wants her car returned. She had this message for whoever took it. 'Don't tear it up. Just bring it back. Just please give me my car back,' Eckles said. Forest Park police are investigating. The shop owner apologized profusely and said he is offering a $5,000 reward for the return of the car. Eckles says she will match that. She said that car has so much sentimental value it's important to get it back.

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