logo
Lawyer couple 'steal back' their stolen car after tracking it with Apple AirTag

Lawyer couple 'steal back' their stolen car after tracking it with Apple AirTag

Yahoo16-06-2025
A couple in London, U.K., stole back their car after they experienced a lack of police support in recovering the stolen vehicle, the wife said in a post on LinkedIn.
'I have to confess … it was kind of fun stealing back our own car… ,' Mia Forbes Pirie, 48, wrote.
An international mediator, facilitator and coach, Forbes Pirie referred to her husband Mark Simpson, 62, as her partner in 'un-crime.' The husband, as per his LinkedIn profile, is a commercial barrister in Greater London.
'But it does make me wonder whether we should have had to do that,' she continued in the LinkedIn post. 'And not whether it's normal, but whether it's right that the police seem to have no interest in investigating what is likely to have been a reasonably sophisticated operation involving a flat bed truck… if there are no consequences, what is the incentive for people not to do more of this?'
Their car, a Jaguar and reportedly worth over $85,000, was stolen from near their residence in Brook Green, West London. According to The Times, the lawyer couple, after contacting the police, were told that the Metropolitan Police reportedly wouldn't be able to investigate. 'Instead, the couple suggested they could find the vehicle themselves and were told to call 101 if they found it,' The Independent reports.
The couple noticed the car missing a week ago, with the AirTag locating it to their road, in what may have been a 'cooling-off period' for the stolen car that one Canadian car owner was made aware of in May last year.
CAA Quebec spokesperson and former police commander André Durocher told CTV News that after a vehicle is stolen, thieves will often leave the stolen vehicle nearby.
'They want to see if there's going to be police surveillance to check the vehicle, if there was a tag [to track it], so it's very standard procedure for car theft rings to function that way,' Durocher told CTV.
The AirTag for the car in London later pinged from Chiswick, which is where the couple eventually found it with interior and carpets ripped off.
The Metropolitan Police, in a statement to The Independent, confirmed that they were alerted to a car theft on June 3. 'Officers spoke to the victim, who shared his intention to recover the vehicle himself. An Apple AirTag was inside, allowing the victim to view its location and trace it. The victim was reminded by officers to contact police again as needed or if police assistance was necessary at the vehicle's location. At 11:23hrs the victim confirmed with police that he had found the vehicle and that it was being recovered by a truck back to the victim's home address.'
'The police are under-resourced and it's a shame,' The Independent reports Forbes Pirie as saying. 'Since we've found it, lots of people have touched the car and the police say that they're going to look underneath the carpets and at the fuse box to see if there are prints there. But it wouldn't have cost very much for them to tell us not to touch anything. That's the one criticism I have.'
The police said the investigation is ongoing and that no arrests have been made at this stage.
Canada has become a very scary place to own a vehicle right now
Instead of getting their stolen car back, Canadian couple received $156 parking ticket
Our website is the place for the latest breaking news, exclusive scoops, longreads and provocative commentary. Please bookmark nationalpost.com and sign up for our daily newsletter, Posted, here.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Luciano Frattolin may have been struggling to pay child support while over $200,000 in debt: reports
Luciano Frattolin may have been struggling to pay child support while over $200,000 in debt: reports

New York Post

time9 hours ago

  • New York Post

Luciano Frattolin may have been struggling to pay child support while over $200,000 in debt: reports

Accused killer dad Luciano Frattolin may have been struggling to cover child support for his daughter, owing hundreds of thousands of dollars to creditors despite depicting a high-flying lifestyle on social media. The flailing 45-year-old Canadian coffee entrepreneur — charged Monday with the murder of his 9-year-old daughter Melina during a trip to upstate New York — had rented a property in the hip Montreal enclave of Mile End since 2020, which he sublet as an Airbnb, according to a report in La Presse. 3 Accused kid-killer Luciano Frattolin kept up appearances of a high-flying lifestyle on social media but was reportedly hundreds of thousands of dollars in debt. LinkedIn/Luciano Frattolin He hired two property managers to run the venture, including having them make the rent payments he owed — enabling him to pay his daughter's child support with what he netted afterward, he said in court documents obtained by the outlet. Advertisement But his lease was terminated by the landlord in August 2024 when he fell $26,000 behind in rent. He was also being denied access to the property, where he said he stored his daughter's winter clothing and toys. He is currently suing the managers for more than $115,000, claiming they exploited the property without his knowledge and never made the rent payments as promised, according to Le Devoir. 3 The suspect ran a series of businesses, including two cafes and an Airbnb rental, which he said in court papers were to be able to help afford his slain daughter's child-support payments. Instagram/Luciano Frattolin Advertisement In turn, the managers alleged Frattolin had planned to empty his bank account and flee the country, which he denied. An employee of Dépanneur Café, a coffee shop Frattolin once owned and on which he still owes Bank of Nova Scotia about $83,000, said the accused killer had been splitting his time between Italy and Canada for the past 18 months. The bank said Frattolin also owed them $97,000 in unpaid credit-card debts from Café Gambella, another coffee shop bearing the same name as his online java business, Gambella Coffee. Advertisement At his arraignment in Ticonderoga Town Court on Monday afternoon, Frattolin said he couldn't afford a lawyer and requested a public defender. But his Instagram page paints a very different picture of his financial situation, rife with photos and posts featuring exotic travel and expensive sports cars and replete with statements such as, 'I am truly addicted to Porsche.' 3 Frattolin has been charged with second-degree murder in the death of his daughter, Melina. Essex County Sheriff's Office Frattolin and Melina had been traveling across Connecticut and New York as part of a custody arrangement he had with his ex-wife, from whom he split in 2019, New York State Police revealed at a press conference Monday. Advertisement Melina sounded fine when she made a phone call to her mom about 6:30 p.m., shortly before the girl and her dad were scheduled to fly back to Quebec, police said. The dad then reported her missing that night — claiming she'd been snatched by two men in a white van around 7:40 p.m., just an hour after the call with her mom, the Albany Times-Union said. Hours later, authorities found her body under a log in shallow water near New York's border with Vermont, with cops later saying the kidnapping report he filed was bogus. He was charged with second-degree murder and concealment of a human corpse. He's due back in court July 25.

Inmate charged with murder of notorious serial killer who feed his victims' remains to ravenous pigs
Inmate charged with murder of notorious serial killer who feed his victims' remains to ravenous pigs

New York Post

time9 hours ago

  • New York Post

Inmate charged with murder of notorious serial killer who feed his victims' remains to ravenous pigs

A Canadian prison inmate serving a three-year sentence was hit with a new murder rap in the jailhouse broomstick beating of notorious serial killer Robert Pickton. Martin Charest, 52, was locked up with Pickton at the Port-Cartier maximum security prison in Quebec when he allegedly attacked the gruesome convicted killer with a broken broomstick on May 19, 2024 — and now faces a first-degree murder charge, the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation reported. Pickton, who was 74 at the time of the attack, was serving a life sentence for a 2007 conviction on six counts of murder — among the dozens of victims he is believed to have killed and then served up to his farm full of pigs. Advertisement 3 Convicted Canadian serial killer Robert Pickton was serving a life sentence when he was beaten to death last year. REUTERS He died at a Quebec hospital 12 days after he was beaten. Canadian authorities last month concluded an investigation into the serial killer's death, interviewing 35 prison staffers and eventually concluding that Charest allegedly 'grabbed a broomstick, broke the handle and thrust it' into Pickton's face, the CBS said in a separate report. Advertisement He was hit with the murder charge on July 3. The investigation determined that security measures at the prison needed to be stepped up. 'A project is underway to secure the doors of the cleaners' storerooms in unit common rooms to better control access to cleaning supplies,' the report concluded. 3 Robert Pickton pleaded guilty to six murders, but authorities believe he likely killed dozens of women. REUTERS Advertisement Charest was sentenced to 36 months in May 2022 after pleading guilty to 13 counts of uttering threats to cause bodily harm or death, According to Montreal's The Gazette. Pickton was convicted in 2007 of killing drug addicts and prostitutes and butchering their remains at his Port Coquitlam pig farm in the Pacific province of British Columbia. Investigators found the partial remains of six women on his ramshackle property, with prosecutors believing the sicko killed them during a crime spree in the late 1990s and early 2000s. 3 Prison surveillance video of convicted serial killer Robert Pickton in in Quebec's Port-Cartier maximum security prison Correctional Service Canada Advertisement The remains or DNA of 33 other women were found on the farm, and Pickton once bragged to an undercover police officer that he killed a total of 49 women. Pickton admitted to strangling his victims and feeding their remains to his pigs — prompting health officials to issue a tainted meat advisory to neighbors who might have bought pork from his farm. The serial killer was also charged with an additional 20 murders, but the charges were dropped after he was sentenced to life in prison.

Trump admin releases MLK's files despite family objection
Trump admin releases MLK's files despite family objection

Axios

time10 hours ago

  • Axios

Trump admin releases MLK's files despite family objection

Despite protests from Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. 's family and the civil rights group he once led, the Trump administration has made public records of the FBI's surveillance of the slain civil rights icon. Why it matters: The move pits President Trump's determination to release documents the government has kept secret for more than a half-century against the family's lingering pain over how J. Edgar Hoover's FBI spied on King and tried to intimidate and humiliate him. It also comes as Trump is refusing to release documents that the Wall Street Journal said is connected to his own recent past — the Epstein files. Driving the news: Director of National Intelligence (DNI) Tulsi Gabbard released on Monday over 230,000 pages of documents related to the 1968 assassination of MLK, the agency announced. In January, Trump ordered the release of all records the U.S. government still holds about King's assassination in 1968, as well as the assassinations of President Kennedy (1963) and Sen. Robert F. Kennedy (1968). The newly released MLK files had never been digitized and had spent decades "gathering dust in federal archives," the agency said. Zoom in: The documents detail the FBI's investigation into MLK's assassination — including case leads, internal memos tracking progress, and records about James Earl Ray's former cellmate, who claimed Ray spoke of a possible assassination plot. The release also includes evidence from a Canadian police department, and never-before-seen CIA records outline overseas intelligence on the international hunt for Ray, the prime suspect in the assassination. What they're saying: "The American people deserve answers decades after the horrific assassination of one of our nation's great leaders," Attorney General Pam Bondi said after the release. "The Department of Justice is proud to partner with Director Gabbard and the ODNI at President Trump's direction for this latest disclosure." The new documents will be uploaded alongside the previously released files at to ensure all MLK assassination documents can be found in a centralized location, the ODNI said. Yes, but: King's two surviving adult children, in a statement, asked that "those who engage with the release of these files to do so with empathy, restraint, and respect for our family's continuing grief." Martin Luther King III and Dr. Bernice A. King had wanted an "advanced viewing" of the documents, and the ODNI said members of the King family were provided an opportunity to review the files two weeks before the release. "During our father's lifetime, he was relentlessly targeted by an invasive, predatory, and deeply disturbing disinformation and surveillance campaign orchestrated by J. Edgar Hoover through the Federal Bureau of Investigation," the Kings said. "While we support transparency and historical accountability, we object to any attacks on our father's legacy or attempts to weaponize it to spread falsehoods." Flashback: King's assassination at the Lorraine Motel in Memphis has long fueled conspiracy theories about potential government involvement, especially because of the FBI's hostility toward him. In 1969, Ray, a career criminal, pleaded guilty to shooting King but later recanted his confession, saying he was part of a larger conspiracy. Allegations of government complicity have persisted for decades, with civil rights leaders, investigative authors and Ray's attorneys citing the FBI, Memphis police, and Missouri State Penitentiary — from which Ray escaped a year before the killing — as potential conspirators. Between the lines: The promise of complete disclosure alarmed the King family, who were hurt in 2019 by the release of FBI files that alleged sordid details about King's sex life, a family friend said. King's pursuit of civil rights through nonviolence is his enduring legacy. But as his work unfolded in the 1960s, Hoover and others in the U.S. government sought to prevent the rise of what they feared would be a Black " messiah" who could unify African Americans.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store