How to avoid becoming a victim of car theft


Save Story
KEY TAKEAWAYS
  • Police in Salt Lake City offer tips to prevent car thefts and break-ins.
  • Recommendations include keeping valuables out of sight and parking in well-lit areas.
  • Residents can request police patrols for added security in their neighborhoods.

SALT LAKE CITY — With our weather warming up, more people are out and about, which means criminals too. Police are concerned about any number of crimes, including car break-ins. They have some smart recommendations to avoid becoming a victim.

Car break-ins aren't limited to when the weather is better; police see them over and over across the state. They want to help you lower the odds of your car being targeted.

Car thefts and car break-ins can seemingly happen at random. In August, 14 cars were broken into in Fruit Heights, cars in [Herriman got hit in December](Herriman residents on edge after multiple cars burglarized at apartment complex) and last month KSL obtained video of a thief driving off with someone else's truck in West Jordan.

Unified Police said it's typically a crime of opportunity. It said a crook walks by, sees something in your car they want, or thinks they have a chance to take the car itself, and goes for it. It can happen in a matter of seconds.

So how do you avoid becoming a victim? Police recommend you treat your car like it could always be broken into before it happens — only keep things in your car that you're OK with someone stealing.

"Keep it to a bare minimum ... Don't keep your keys in your car. Don't keep your purses or wallets in your car, or anything of value, or memorabilia you find important," said Sgt. Aymee Race with the Unified Police Department.

If you can't avoid keeping something in your car, keep it out of sight. That's a good rule of thumb for where you park, too. If possible, park your car in a secure spot, like inside a garage. However, if you can't, try to stay in a well-lit area, which would make a criminal think twice.

If it's something you worry about, police said you can always call and ask them to do a patrol in your neighborhood. Unified Police said it gets requests all the time to go out and make the rounds, and officers are happy to do it for you. Just call police dispatch, and it can send an officer out.

The Key Takeaways for this article were generated with the assistance of large language models and reviewed by our editorial team. The article, itself, is solely human-written.

Most recent Utah stories

Related topics

Brian Carlson, KSLBrian Carlson
Brian Carlson is an award-winning Utah journalist, who has spent the last 16 years reporting in his hometown, but his time on television started much earlier than that. Born and raised in Utah, Brian got his first taste for on-air news at 8 years old being interviewed by KSL for knowing how to call 911 during an attempted home break-in. He began appearing regularly on TV in high school for an all-student run show on KUTV, then graduated from BYU in Broadcast Journalism. His professional TV career started in 2005 at KNDU in Kennewick, Washington. Brian moved back to Utah in 2008 reporting and anchoring for various shows at ABC4, and finally came to KSL in June 2024. In 2012, Brian won a regional Emmy for his report titled “Spice in the City,” in which Brian purchased drugs undercover and was instrumental in assisting police capture an illegal drug dealer. In 2014, Brian was the first TV reporter to tell the story of Ron Stallworth, a young black detective who infiltrated the KKK. Brian’s report became the catalyst to the Oscar award-winning film “BlacKkKlansman” directed by Spike Lee. In Brian’s career, he’s reported on everything from going behind the fire lines documenting the moment an elderly couple discovered they lost all they had in a Utah wildfire, to jumping out of an airplane, or gliding 57 mph down the Olympic skeleton track in Park City. Brian is also the only reporter to become an NBA mascot for a day, working with the former Utah Jazz Bear. Watching KSL5 News you can find Brian each week covering the latest news LIVE on location, including the devastating flooding in Orem, the Honie execution, or from the Utah GOP headquarters LIVE on election night, etc. Brian is happily married to his wife Liz and together they have an adorable son. He’s also stepfather to four children. Brian enjoys weightlifting, water sports, rock climbing, cheering on the BYU Cougars, and loves calling the Beehive State home.

STAY IN THE KNOW

Get informative articles and interesting stories delivered to your inbox weekly. Subscribe to the KSL.com Trending 5.
By subscribing, you acknowledge and agree to KSL.com's Terms of Use and Privacy Notice.
Newsletter Signup

KSL Weather Forecast

KSL Weather Forecast
Play button