Re: Truck stolen
Posted: Mon Mar 12, 2012 8:46 am
They are in those ford trucks and gone in 10-15 seconds.
mudsucker wrote:The crawdad place ought to provide security in the lot if that much thieving is going on!
mudsucker wrote:The crawdad place ought to provide security in the lot if that much thieving is going on!
Where on county line were youfarmerc83 wrote:My '01 F150 was hit on County Line Rd a few years back
and your truck is gone when you get ready to leave. Steep price to pay for some crawdads!deltadukman wrote:mudsucker wrote:The crawdad place ought to provide security in the lot if that much thieving is going on!
They charge a $5-10 cover charge just to get in that shanty. Then you buy their high priced crawfish and shrimp. You bring your own beer. When asked about the cover charge they dubbed it as paying for the "entertainment"....which, the last time I went, looked and sounded like a Pentecostal Karaoke group.
My buddy had is mid-2000 model F-150 stolen out of the parking lot of the Bulldog a few years ago. Same deal as above. Jammed something in the lock mechanism and opened it right up.deltadukman wrote:Where on county line were youfarmerc83 wrote:My '01 F150 was hit on County Line Rd a few years back
They ever find your buddies truck when it was stolen @ bulldog?arduckslayer wrote:My buddy had is mid-2000 model F-150 stolen out of the parking lot of the Bulldog a few years ago. Same deal as above. Jammed something in the lock mechanism and opened it right up.deltadukman wrote:Where on county line were youfarmerc83 wrote:My '01 F150 was hit on County Line Rd a few years back
Bust the steering column and touch the wires together.DeltaCotton12 wrote:I dont understand how they are stealing them without the keys or are these trucks with the touch pads and leaving the keys in the console?
Yeah, the cops pulled some chick over for a routine traffic stop and she was driving his truck. Tag description didn't match the vehicle when they ran the plates and they got to digging. She'd bought it from somebody that claimed to be the owner. Don't know if they ever tracked them down. He was out of it by then because his insurance had paid him and they were technically the owners of the truck.Woodzie wrote:They ever find your buddies truck when it was stolen @ bulldog?arduckslayer wrote: My buddy had is mid-2000 model F-150 stolen out of the parking lot of the Bulldog a few years ago. Same deal as above. Jammed something in the lock mechanism and opened it right up.
And the bad thing is that you can't go "El Camino Crew" on them and put a pittbull in the back of your truck to protect it. Clinton has a breed specific dog law.SNOT wrote:In 2006 my '01 F150 was stolen in Clinton and found 3 weeks later, in 2008 same truck was broken into at my house in Clinton and a rifle was stolen, in 2010 my 2006 F250 was broken into at Que Sera downtown...they ripped the cd player out, then in January my 2010 F250 was broken into at my house in Clinton and they stole another rifle.
Hinds County and Ford trucks - a match made in nagger heaven.
SNOT wrote:In 2006 my '01 F150 was stolen in Clinton and found 3 weeks later, in 2008 same truck was broken into at my house in Clinton and a rifle was stolen, in 2010 my 2006 F250 was broken into at Que Sera downtown...they ripped the cd player out, then in January my 2010 F250 was broken into at my house in Clinton and they stole another rifle.
Hinds County and Ford trucks - a match made in nagger heaven.
Why should they? Two Ford owners that have experienced break ins and/or theft of their trucks, yet both of you are return customers. Looks like job securtiy to me.farmerc83 wrote:Ford ought to build a truck that isn't so easily broken into. There have been problems with this since the body switch in '97. My '01 F150 was hit on County Line Rd a few years back and my '10 F150 was broken into while visiting a friend in a gated apartment complex in Horn Lake. Both thieves jammed something under the passenger side door handle, where the plastic cover meets the metal door.