Your reaction to cops "helpfully" locking your car door?

On my car, in order to lock the doors, you’d have to lean over to the center console. No switches or levers on the door itself. You basically have to sit down in the seat to reach it.

I leave my car unlocked pretty much all the time. Back before I bought everything on credit card, I’d have change in the center. Some mornings, I’d notice that the change had been riffled through, and there seemed to be less silver in there. Big deal, some teenager got a couple bucks in quarters.

Or they see something in your car that is more valuable to them than your window is. I used to lock my car at work, but stopped that after finding my window broken. Cost me a whole lot more to replace than the change that they got.

That’s fine, and I’ve signed a form from the local PD that allows them to do so, and to even enter and investigate if they see something that they deem suspicious (and to call me). But that’s at my business. I would never sign up for something like that at my house. I see my car as being a whole lot closer to my house than my business in terms of my personal property.

So, if they see or smell something, you are claiming that they will just completely forget it?

Or, will they make a note of your license plate, and pull you over the next chance they get?

Some of us are not as keen as you on always assuming only the most noble of intentions of authority figures and giving them absolute trust in their motives.

Hell, I wouldn’t be surprised that some use it as a pretext to plant contraband so they can follow it up with a bust. Believe it or not, there are bad cops out there. There’s a whole thread if you need to see some examples.

Yeah, cops do a number of things to proactively stop wasting their time, they are often not in the best interest of the people they are supposed to protect, but only in the best interest of the officer wanting to get back to wasting their time on their own terms.

The only reason I would make a police report about such a break in to my car is I needed to do so for insurance purposes. I would only have to do that if they had broken my window in order to gain entry. Back when that happened before, I had a beater car with state minimum insurance, I didn’t bother anyone with it. Now I’ve got a better car with comprehensive insurance, so I’d have to waste an officer’s time to come out and take a police report.

They sell devices, meant as a survival tool in case your car goes into the water, that very easily, and fairly quietly, break a window. I’m not going to link to it here, but a simple search finds one for about $6. A locked door does very little to deter someone who wants to get into your car.

I don’t leave my keys or valuables in my car. I’m not exactly how hard it is to hotwire it, but it’s a whole lot harder than breaking the window. If someone is willing and able to defeat the ignition lock, then I don’t see a window being as big a deterrent as you may think.

Not on my car. The doors will only lock or unlock when the key fob is present.

While I understand what you mean by that statement. I’d argue that police dealing with cars getting stolen or rifled through is hardly a waste of time. It’s what you signed up for, it’s, at least in part, why they exist.
A few days ago there was multiple bomb threats and some of the schools around here. In one of the letters from the school, there was an implication that this was a huge waste of police, sheriff and FBI time and resources (though they did make 4 arrests). Again, I understand that, from the POV of the bomb threats being hoaxes, sure it’s a waste of resources. But until you know it’s a hoax, it’s not a waste of resources. For example, the bomb squad and bomb sniffing dogs are there specifically to find out if the threat is real or not. The fact that no bombs were found didn’t make it a waste of time.

And how much more swamped would you be if half those calls turned out to the the police checking doors. If I see someone walking down the street attempting to open car doors, I’m going to call the police, not check to see if it’s the police.

What if the police put out PSAs to remind people to lock their car doors or otherwise do what they can to prevent break-ins? What if they put up extra patrols in areas with problems? There’s a few areas by me that people can almost count on their cars getting broken into on a daily basis. So much so that people sit on their balconies with cell phones recording it on a nightly basis and posting it to facebook. And, FWIW, this is a middle-upper class, mostly white, neighborhood, so extra patrols aren’t going to cause racism issues (ie it’s not sending extra squads to the ‘bad’ neighborhoods).

This. Modern cars, with fancy chipped keys, are supposed to be hard to hot wire, too. And if you want to steal the car to cut it into parts, you can just tow it.

I usually lock the door out of habit, but honestly, if I’m leaving the car in a theft-prone neighborhood, and I’m leaving anything in it that someone might want to steal (bags that don’t actually contain anything valuable, food…) I intentionally leave the doors unlocked to avoid broken windows.

Do we even have any actual evidence a police department is doing this?

When I read about stuff like this, I really appreciate living in the sticks. If someone wanted to break into our cars, they’d have to get to our home, hiking down 1/4 mile private gravel lane. They’d set off all sorts of motion lights along the way, wake our dogs who would go nuts, and they still wouldn’t be inside the garage where the cars are kept (unlocked).

Appears to be the post in question FWIW.

Maybe try googling it.

I like that you linked to 3 articles not related to this thread after I’d already gone and found the actual post OP was talking about and posted it, but thanks.

Then your car is probably the exception to the rule or things are differently manufactured for the UK market (I have it in my memory that you’re from that side of the pond, but, if I’m mistaken, disregard.)

In all my vehicles and my wife’s vehicles, it was possible to lock the car from the interior without the presence of a key or fob. I just checked with my 2014 Mazda 3 and my wife’s 2020 Hyundai Ioniq, both key fob models, and the behavior is that if no fob is present, locking or unlocking the door from the outside is not allowed, but the interior switch is fully functional, allowing both locking and unlocking. The unlocking from the interior with no fob presence is particularly important, as it means nobody can lock you inside the car by leaving you locked behind without the fob. Similarly, being able to lock the door without fob presence I’ve found useful as there have been times I couldn’t be arsed to find my keys or otherwise separated from them and wanted to lock the door.

Clearly, it’s the usual set-up here, otherwise the situation in the OP wouldn’t exist.

Huh?
You asked for evidence, I provided you with FOUR articles talking about police locking car doors. How is that not related to the thread?
And your post came in seconds before mine (check the time stamp). I guess spent a little extra time trying to answer your question.
But, you’re welcome.

I mean a post with attitude that was lower quality than what I had already done isn’t exactly something I’m in the business of thanking people for.

What I’ve learned from this thread is, if you lock your car doors, you’re just asking for trouble; and if you leave them unlocked, you’re just asking for trouble.

Do you have some kind of issue with me? Why are you annoyed that my posts is, by your standards, lower quality? You asked for evidence, I provided said evidence. If it’s not up to your standards, ignore it or tell us what you’re looking for.

I’ll double-up on that guarantee. That’s exactly what they’re doing. I don’t think they thought it through. But…

I can all but guarantee that’s true, as well, should the situation come up.

Thanks for those links. I’m not sure how I’d feel about the cops just testing the car doors and ringing my bell if they found one unlocked. I have had a cop tell us that somebody was caught breaking into cars in the parking lot and suggest that we go check our vehicles. I thought that was cool of them.

I’m not a guy who goes through vehicles every couple years, but over the past 20 or so I think all my door locks worked without fobs (power windows, no—key needs to be in ACC position for that because of the battery drain). But maybe manufacturers are phasing that out for whatever reason or it’s European vs. USA variation.

One morning while living in Little Rock, I went outside to find that the driver’s side window of my truck had been smashed in and someone rifled through my vehicle. Looking across the street I could see that someone smashed out the window of my neighbor’s car as well. Looking farther down the street I could see yet another vehicle with its window smashed out. The other two times I had my car broken into while living in the same house they were nice enough not to smash the window.

Moderating: Cut it out. If you think someone is actually threadshitting or being nasty to you, report it. But those posts aren’t.

I wondered about that as well. They could likely come up with a phone number or address for the car, based on it’s plate or VIN and, if convenient, make contact with the owner. But that still means they have to attempt to open each car door, which puts us right back in the same place.
On the one hand, I don’t know what the answer is. Lock your doors and get your window broken, don’t lock your doors and have your car rifled through because it’s an easy mark.
On the other hand, what ever the answer is, I know it doesn’t involve cops walking up and down the block opening car doors to see if they’re locked.

It really does seem like they’re just begging for an illegal search and seizure case. With so many people having doorbell cameras, dash cameras, cell phone cameras etc. It won’t take long before someone gets pulled over 20 feet away from their house and the cop, almost magically, finds something illegal in their car (not that they planted it, just that they knew where it was) and someone produces a video of the cop going through the car in the middle of the night. Even better if he says something stupid to his partner out loud like ‘Look, I found a bag of weed, I’m gonna make sure to pull this guy over in the morning’.

Point taken but I think you messed up how you were quoting messages there FWIW.

I think the “leave them unlocked to protect your windows” crowd is in the wrong as a matter of risk assessment. I think the population of thieves who will steal from an unlocked house or car, is much higher than is the population that will break either of those open. Now, the $ loss in the case of locking your car could be greater because of the broken window, but even that isn’t certain–that assumes nothing valuable is left in the car and that they don’t just steal the entire car itself, or remove something expensive from inside the car like the stereo etc that is just as expensive to replace as the window.