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Police say Volkswagen refused to track a stolen car with a 2-year-old inside — after the thieves ran over the child's pregnant mother — until the owner paid a fee

Feb 28, 2023, 03:17 IST
Business Insider
"Volkswagen takes the safety and security of its customers very seriously. Our thoughts are with the victims and their family." A Volkswagen spokesperson told Insider. "Volkswagen has a procedure in place with a third-party provider for Car-Net Support Services involving emergency requests from law enforcement. They have executed this process successfully in previous incidents. Unfortunately, in this instance, there was a serious breach of the process. We are addressing the situation with the parties involved. "Matt Cardy/Getty Images
  • A carjacker knocked and ran over a pregnant woman to steal her Volkswagen car.
  • The woman's 2-year-old was inside the car. Volkswagen asked for a $150 fee to track it.
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Carjackers stole a Volkswagen with a 2-year-old child inside and when police contacted Volkswagen Car-Net, a system that can control the car remotely, to get help finding it, they were told it would cost $150, authorities said.

The request for payment created a delay in tracking the stolen car that Chris Covelli, deputy chief of the Lake County Sheriff's Office in Illinois, called "16 minutes of hell," according to the Chicago Tribune.

The tracking system on the stolen car had been deactivated, and Volkswagen Car-Net refused to track the vehicle until it received payment to reactivate it, according to a statement by the Lake County Sheriff's Office in Illinois.

Police ultimately recovered both the child and the car without help from the tracking service.

A Volkswagen spokesperson told Insider that it has a "procedure in place with a third-party provider for Car-Net Support Services involving emergency requests from law enforcement." The automaker said the procedure was executed "successfully in previous incidents" and blamed the incident on a "serious breach of the process."

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"We are addressing the situation with the parties involved," the spokesperson said. "Volkswagen takes the safety and security of its customers very seriously."

The incident happened in Libertyville, Illinois, a village a few miles outside of Chicago. On February 23, a 34-year woman, who's six-months pregnant according to news reports, pulled into her driveway with her Volkswagen car.

She took one of her two children inside the house, and when she turned to get her second child, a 2-year-old boy, she saw a car, a white BMW, had followed her into the driveway, police said.

A man got off the BMW, knocked the woman to the ground, and drove off with her car with the child inside, running her over, according to police.

The child was rescued a short time later in the nearby city of Waukegan, where the carjackers appear to have left him. The woman, whose injuries were serious, according to the police statement, is in the hospital in stable condition, and her car was found abandoned in a parking lot.

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