Your recently purchased used car might be tracking you

Arkansas Business: Car-Mart Uses GPS To Improve ‘Efficiency’ by Marty Cook:

By now, you’ve heard of the remarkable GPS-related story from earlier this month in Philadelphia.

A 22-year-old woman, Carlesha Freeland-Gaither, was snatched off a Philadelphia street by a man who forced her into a car. The chilling scene was captured on surveillance video, and the suspected kidnapper was later shown using Freeland-Gaither’s credit card at an ATM.

These stories seldom turn out well. Thanks in part to GPS, this one did.

(It should be noted that it also turned out well because of Freeland-Gaither, who kicked out a window of the car, left her cellphone at the scene and survived. The suspected kidnapper is a convicted felon who is also suspected of hitting a 16-year-old girl on the head with a shovel and dousing her with bleach.)

Depending on which version you read, police either saw the license plate or a dealership sticker on the kidnapper’s getaway car or a car salesman contacted authorities after he saw ATM video of the suspect, whom he recognized as someone who bought a car from his dealership. Either way, it was determined that the kidnapper’s car had been bought from a Buy Here, Pay Here dealership in Virginia and was equipped with a GPS device.

This entry was posted in GPS / Tracking Data, Informational privacy. Bookmark the permalink.

Comments are closed.