| ==Phrack Magazine== | |
| Volume Four, Issue Forty-Three, File 20 of 27 | |
| [** NOTE: The following file is presented for informational purposes | |
| only. Phrack Magazine takes no responsibility for anyone | |
| attempting the actions described within. **] | |
| ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- | |
| The Step-by-Step Guide | |
| to | |
| Stealing a Camaro | |
| by | |
| Spy Ace | |
| spyace@mindvox.phantom.com | |
| PURPOSE: To describe step-by-step, with specificity, exactly how | |
| the average person might accomplish with skill and alacrity, the | |
| theft of a motor vehicle, particularly 1982-1993 Chevrolet Camaros, | |
| Pontiac Firebirds and similar beasts. | |
| MOTIVE: While I am a telecommunications enthusiast, I am also a | |
| basically honest, law-abiding working man. In 1989 an individual | |
| driving a borrowed automobile struck my only means of transportation, | |
| a 1986 Chevrolet Camaro, totalling it. My vehicle was parked and | |
| unoccupied at the time. In an amazing feat of legal maneuvering, | |
| and after protracted judicial proceedings, all parties involved | |
| managed to escape liability and I was left without a car or | |
| reimbursement. The insurance companies are lying, cheating scum. | |
| As a result, I took matters into my own hands and stole a | |
| replacement car. I came to the conclusion that the justice system | |
| in this country exists only to protect the strong from the weak, | |
| the haves from the have-nots and the rich from the not rich. It | |
| has nothing to do with rectifying wrongs. It is therefore incumbent | |
| upon all aggrieved parties to seek personal satisfaction when the | |
| American legal system fails to provide it. My motive is thus | |
| twofold: | |
| 1. To see the evil insurance companies screwed some more by | |
| sharing my knowledge of car-thieving techniques with those | |
| who might apply them. | |
| 2. To assist the little man in obtaining justice when he/she may | |
| by confronted with a situation similar to mine. | |
| BACKGROUND: Before I stole my car, I conducted extensive research | |
| and talked to a number of individuals in the automotive | |
| repossession field, law-enforcement, and several auto | |
| mechanics. I assure the reader that everything | |
| contained in this file is true to the best of my | |
| knowledge and that I HAVE ACTUALLY DONE WHAT I AM | |
| WRITING ABOUT. I am not writing hypothetically; I | |
| speak from experience. I urge the reader, if he is | |
| serious about stealing a vehicle, to verify my | |
| research and find out much of this information for | |
| himself. Auto shops at local high schools/community | |
| colleges are excellent places to experiment and | |
| learn, and auto repossession specialists are invaluable | |
| sources of information. | |
| ------ | |
| So, you've decided to steal a car. How nice. In this article I | |
| will be covering in detail exactly how I stole a 1988 Chevrolet | |
| Camaro to replace the 1986 of mine that was destroyed by an | |
| irresponsible driver. The techniques described herein will work on | |
| 1982 thru 1993 Chevy Camaros/Z28s/IROCs/Berlinettas and probably | |
| the same years Pontiac Firebirds and Trans Ams. With regard to | |
| the Pontiacs I cannot say for certain because I only experimented | |
| on Camaro variety cars since that is what I was after. The Pontiacs | |
| are very similar, however, and I believe this information to be | |
| applicable to them. | |
| There are basically only two stages to obtaining possession of a | |
| vehicle. First, one must gain actual physical access to the inside | |
| of the car and second, one must disable the steering-lock mechanism | |
| and activate the ignition. Once these two things have been | |
| accomplished, the vehicle is yours, subject to the infuriated | |
| efforts of the owner to regain it. It should be noted, of course, | |
| that there may be complications associated with either of these | |
| steps, such as alarm systems or the factory anti-theft mechanisms. | |
| I will deal with both of these in turn. | |
| First, gaining entrance to the vehicle. This will require one | |
| tool: a 24-inch aluminum "shop" ruler. I tried several and settled | |
| on the Pickett brand ACF-24, available in most art/blueprint supply | |
| stores. It consists of a 1.25x24x1/16 inch piece of aluminum. For | |
| maximum efficiency, it should have two slight bends to it. First, | |
| at 14 inches, bend it subtly to about 15 degrees. Then, at 19 | |
| inches on the ruler, bend it back so that the two sections are | |
| parallel. Like this: | |
| N | |
| _________________ W + E | |
| \_______ S | |
| Of course, the angle in this diagram is far too steep. Both angles | |
| should only be about 15 degrees. Hopefully, you get the idea. If | |
| not, you probably shouldn't be thinking about stealing a car. In | |
| any case, if you have succeeded in fashioning this, you are now | |
| armed with the only tool necessary to gain keyless entry into your | |
| soon-to-be new Camaro. The application of this tool is simple. | |
| Walk up to a Chevrolet Camaro of a year described above, position | |
| yourself at either door. FIRST: Check to see if the door is | |
| unlocked. You'd be surprised. If it isn't, you will need to insert | |
| the tool straight down, in between the rubber weather-stripping and | |
| the glass, approximately 4-5 inches from the back of the door, | |
| directly in line with the door-lock. Insert the tool such that the | |
| small section (see above diagram) is thrust down into the door (did | |
| I mention that stealing a car is very sexual? Never mind...). The | |
| small section of the tool should be bent TOWARDS you as you stand | |
| at the car. In the above diagram, north is towards the car, west is | |
| straight up in the air, east is straight down towards the inside of | |
| the door, and south is towards you as you stand at the car. Got the | |
| picture? If not, get a friend to explain it to you. | |
| The tool should go in about 16 inches until it catches the lock | |
| mechanism. If it goes in further than about 17 inches, withdraw and | |
| try again. Drive straight down, don't force, try moving your | |
| position an inch to the right or left. Eventually you will feel | |
| the lock mechanism. It will be rigid but a little spongy (epitome | |
| of GM engineering). Press down hard on the tool and let up. Try | |
| the door handle. Does it open? It probably will. If not, drive a | |
| little harder and keep trying the door. It will give eventually. | |
| WHY THIS WORKS: Well, this works for two reasons. First of all, | |
| General Motors is run by a bunch of cheap bastards and their | |
| cars are designed by engineers who couldn't find their asses with | |
| both hands. Basically, it's a shitty lock mechanism. It was | |
| designed shitty and the clods who sell us the piece-of-shit cars | |
| couldn't care less if they get stolen so they've never bothered to | |
| redesign the damn thing. | |
| In order to understand exactly why it works, the curious reader | |
| would be well advised to go to his local library and look in a | |
| Clymer or Chilton automotive repair manual for 1986 (or thereabouts) | |
| Camaro. In Chapter 12 of the Chilton, under "Body" (page | |
| 290 of mine) there is a magnificently concise exploded diagram of | |
| "Outside door lock assembly" which contains all the relevant | |
| information. The lock cylinder itself is connected to some linkage | |
| which activates the locking/unlocking mechanism. After a few | |
| months of normal use, this linkage develops some "slop" in it due | |
| to slight wear of the locking cylinder attachment. By pressing | |
| down on the linkage down inside the door, you are activating the | |
| (un)locking mechanism directly and there is enough play in the | |
| locking cylinder to allow it to give. Take a look at the diagram | |
| and you'll understand completely. | |
| Once I understood the locking mechanism, the deficiencies | |
| therein, and formulated an approach to overcoming it, I | |
| practiced on a friend's Camaro about a hundred times. If done | |
| properly and carefully, this will in no way harm any part of | |
| the car or locking mechanism. Try it on the driver's side | |
| first; this is usually the easiest because it has the most wear | |
| in the linkage. Then graduate to the passenger side door. Then | |
| try it out about a hundred times, then with your eyes closed, | |
| then while drunk, then with one hand tied behind your back. In | |
| a day or two you'll be able to get into a Camaro in less than | |
| ten seconds. | |
| A note about alarms: some clever individuals, in an effort to | |
| keep their prized vehicles from being stolen by the likes of you, | |
| have equipped them with a motion sensor or other devious device | |
| which tends to emit a shrill series of tones when aggravated. I | |
| suggest that before trying to open someone else's car, you first | |
| give it a good rocking back and forth in order to set off any | |
| alarm which might be present. Since it is not illegal (though it | |
| may be physically dangerous) to rock someone's car, it's always | |
| best to try this before actually breaking in. If the alarm | |
| screams, go on to some other victim. Personally, I have | |
| encountered very few alarms; the "it won't happen to me" attitude | |
| is still prevalent. | |
| Once you've gained physical entry into the vehicle, you are | |
| now ready for Step Two, ignition lock bypass. Unfortunately, this | |
| is a difficult step. I did a tremendous amount of research to | |
| determine the best way to deal with this problem and have | |
| developed an approach. It is by no means the only way to breach | |
| the ignition locking mechanism, but in my opinion it is the | |
| best. In developing this method I was most interested in several | |
| goals. First of all, I wanted an elegant solution; that is, | |
| something simple. Minimum tools and work required, and something | |
| that worked ALL THE TIME, not 50%. Second, I wanted an approach | |
| that could be accomplished quickly (for obvious reasons) and with | |
| minimum damage to the vehicle. Ideally, I wanted an attack which | |
| would not even be immediately obvious to someone (such as a cop) | |
| glancing in my car at a stoplight. Spending 30 minutes tearing | |
| apart the steering column might allow you to get the car started, | |
| but it won't meet the above criteria: speed, elegance, reliability, | |
| invisibility. | |
| The problem is that to do this requires a special tool and to | |
| get this tool one must either send away for it or have access to | |
| a machine shop to fabricate one. Neither of these is quick and | |
| easy, but the preparation is well worth it. Here's the basic | |
| idea. The General Motors vehicle uses an ignition locking | |
| mechanism called a "sidebar." This is basically one nasty piece | |
| of hardened fucking steel which blocks the lock cylinder from | |
| rotating when a properly-fitting key is not in place. It makes | |
| it impossible to simply "shear off the pins" by brute-force | |
| turning with a screwdriver or similar device. The solution is to | |
| use a tool capable of cracking the lock cylinder housing in which | |
| the sidebar sits. The cylinder housing itself is cast aluminum, | |
| which is considerably weaker than the sidebar itself, so when the | |
| proper force is applied it will be the housing which gives, not | |
| the sidebar. But no matter. | |
| First, get access to a Camaro, or for this exercise, just about | |
| any GM automobile since 1978 (the year they got the bright idea | |
| to put a locking screw in to keep people from just ripping the | |
| whole ignition lockset right out -- but that's a whole different | |
| story...). My favorite place to experiment on cars without being | |
| observed (and in fact legally) is to go to a local self-serve | |
| auto-wrecking "You Pull It" yard. They have these in many cities | |
| around the fruited plains; you pay a buck or two to get in and then | |
| go pluck parts from rotting American classics. If you don't drag | |
| any parts out, you can basically tear apart all the cars you want | |
| for a buck. If you don't have a You-Pluck-It nearby or are | |
| philosophically opposed to vehicular cannibalism, then use the | |
| method previously described to break into someone's Camaro for this. | |
| Once you have access to a GM (preferably a Camaro), get a | |
| screwdriver out and pry the outer ring off of the ignition set. | |
| The ring I'm talking about is the thing with the two tabs on it | |
| for your fingers to turn when you rotate the ignition to start | |
| the car. Just pry that sucker off of there -- it comes off very | |
| easily as it is affixed by two small gripping tabs. I can usually | |
| remove it by hand, but it's easiest to simply pry gently with a | |
| screwdriver. After you have pried that off of the ignition set, | |
| take a look. You'll see the ignition cylinder (with the keyway), | |
| the outer housing, and the actual ignition activation mechanism, | |
| which has two slots in it (where the outer ring fit into before | |
| you pried it off). This ignition linkage, with the two tabs, is | |
| what turns when a fitting key is inserted into the keyway and then | |
| turned. Note that in a GM ignition set, a fitting key serves only | |
| to withdraw the sidebar to allow the outer ignition mechanism to | |
| turn. | |
| The problem is to overcome the sidebar which prevents the | |
| ignition from turning. Fortunately, there is a tool for this very | |
| purpose. It is manufactured by Briggs and Stratton (yes, the lawn | |
| mower engine people) who happen to also make the locksets for GM. | |
| They make the locks. They make the tool to break the locks. You | |
| figure it out. Anyway, this neat little device is called a "GM | |
| Force Tool". I got mine from LDM Enterprises in Van Nuys, California | |
| (where else?) and it ran me about $90. Their fone number is | |
| 800-451-5950 and you should probably tell them that you're in the | |
| automotive repossession business if you go to order one of these. | |
| If they won't sell you one (because someone at GM read this | |
| article and hopped up and down) then simply go down to a local | |
| repo man and pay him an extra $25 to order one for you. Most of | |
| those guys are pretty sleazy and will do just about anything for | |
| a buck. If you have access to a machine shop and are reasonably | |
| competent, go ahead and make one. | |
| I will attempt a description. Don't feel stupid if you don't | |
| get this; it's difficult to describe it in text. Drop me E-mail | |
| and I'll send you a .GIF of the fucking thing. Anyway, it looks | |
| basically like a socket with very thin walls and two small tabs | |
| which fit into where the thumb-ring-thing used to go. You tap it | |
| onto the ignition set, into the two slots and the outside walls | |
| of the tool fit very snugly around the outside of the locking | |
| mechanism to keep it from splitting apart as you turn it. On the | |
| other end of the tool is a 1/2 inch square hole for a ratchet. | |
| Got the idea? Tap it onto the ignition, attach a healthy sized | |
| ratchet and turn slowly but forcefully. After about 30 degrees of | |
| turn the sidebar will crack the ignition lock housing and the | |
| whole mechanism will freely turn. If you don't understand this, | |
| take a look at a GM ignition (sans outer ring) and the facts will | |
| become readily apparent. If you have access to a machine shop, it | |
| is a simple matter to make one of these tools. Go to your local | |
| GM dealer and buy a whole ignition set, snap the outer ring off of | |
| there and take your measurements. Remember that the inner wall of | |
| the force tool must fit snugly around the lockset in order to keep | |
| it from splitting apart. That is why a device with simply two tabs | |
| which fit into the ignition linkage will not work (I tried it -- | |
| the metal is too soft and tears apart). | |
| Seem like too much work? Well, of course it is a bit of work, | |
| but preparation is the key! My father always stressed that the | |
| most important part of doing a job is having the right tools. The | |
| tools in this case are KNOWLEDGE of how all these goofy parts fit | |
| together and operate, a properly constructed force tool, and the | |
| patience to apply these two components to bring about the desired | |
| result. With some practice I was able to circumvent a Camaro | |
| ignition in just under 30 seconds. It does very little actual | |
| damage to the vehicle ($11.00 for a new ignition set) and in fact | |
| the thumb-ring-thing can be jammed back on and a key inserted and | |
| it will appear that everything is proper (in case you're pulled | |
| over by the local constable). | |
| V.A.T.S. | |
| -------- | |
| Because of the horrendous problems with car theft, particularly of | |
| Camaros, GM came up with a neat system boldly dubbed the "Vehicle | |
| Anti Theft System". Needless to say, as with most security devices, | |
| VATS accomplished little more than being a nuisance to vehicle owners | |
| and a minor inconvenience to car thieves. Here's how to defeat it. | |
| First, basic theory of operation. The ignition of a VATS equipped | |
| vehicle (most 1988 and newer GMs, particularly the Camaros/Firebirds) | |
| is the same as the normal GM ignition except that it has an | |
| electronic sensor built in which requires activation by a resistor | |
| pack built in to the owner's key. There are fifteen possible resistor | |
| types, so each different VATS key that you have gives you a 6.7% | |
| chance of being capable of activating the ignition. The catch is that | |
| if you feed it the wrong one it will kill the ignition for 4 minutes. | |
| Thus, if you had a complete set of fifteen VATS keys, it would take | |
| you a maximum of one hour to run through them all. This is GM's | |
| idea of security: annoy the thief. | |
| If you plan to tackle a VATS-equipped car, get a full set of the | |
| fifteen VATS keys. They're a few bucks each and you can get them | |
| from a locksmith or LDM. Obtain access to your target car in an | |
| area and in such circumstances as will allow you to work for an | |
| hour relatively undisturbed. In practice, this is not very difficult | |
| (more on that later). Once you have access to the vehicle and are | |
| satisfied that you can work unobserved, break the ignition lock | |
| using your force-tool as described above. Insert your first VATS | |
| key blank and attempt to start the vehicle. If it will not activate | |
| the ignition, remove the key, wait four minutes and try the next | |
| one. Eventually you'll hit it. (Median hit time, of course: 30 | |
| minutes). Drive away. | |
| Scouting a Victim | |
| ----------------- | |
| An essential element of stealing a car without getting caught | |
| is picking out the right one. Again, preparation is the key. Once | |
| you've mastered the necessary techniques, start looking around for | |
| a good place to pick up a vehicle. The car thieves that I spoke | |
| with told me that their preferred places are mall parking lots at | |
| night: there is a lot of activity so you probably won't be noticed | |
| lurking around waiting for a good prospect to show up. People | |
| usually go into the mall for several hours to buy crap, so you have | |
| time to work. Wait until no one is looking and pounce. Once you are | |
| inside the vehicle (which, with practice, may be accomplished in | |
| 15 seconds) you are home free. No one is going to pay any attention | |
| to you screwing around inside the vehicle and you'll be long gone | |
| by the time the owner finishes charging a new Salad Shooter on his | |
| American Express. Another good place is airport parking lots. While | |
| they are often sporadically patrolled, it is in practice a simple | |
| matter to drive around until you spy the right vehicle, then pack | |
| all your necessary tools into a suitcase and walk from the terminal | |
| to the lot like a returning airline passenger. That's how I did it. | |
| The car was not reported stolen for over two weeks (it was in the | |
| long-term lot), giving me plenty of breathing room. | |
| There are numerous other places. Start noting the places that | |
| you leave your car: supermarket, movie theater, in front of your | |
| house, at work, in a parking garage, etc. Start noticing patterns. | |
| That 1988 IROC you see parked in the same place for five hours | |
| every Tuesday. When you actually commit the deed, BE PREPARED. Do | |
| a dry run. Be calm, work quickly but carefully. Act like you | |
| belong where you are -- don't lurk around nervously. Walk right | |
| up to the car and steal it. If confronted by someone, try to talk | |
| your way out of it. Don't get violent: it's just a thing. A car | |
| is not worth hurting someone over. Don't worry about getting | |
| caught: most cities can't cope with the crime epidemic and do not | |
| bother to do much about auto theft. | |
| What Do I Do With It? | |
| --------------------- | |
| That's up to you. Take it for a joy ride. If you boosted it from | |
| an airport lot you can probably safely cruise around in it for a | |
| week or two. Go pick up bimbos and drive them to Las Vegas. Or | |
| sell the thing to a chop shop (you're on your own finding them; I | |
| have no experience with them). Tear it apart yourself and sell the | |
| parts. Drive it into the lobby of an insurance company building. | |
| Or go buy a Camaro of the same year and model that has been | |
| totalled out and switch the VIN plates once you have clear title. | |
| That's not a particularly difficult affair, although some skill is | |
| required to remove the VIN tags and install them in your new car. | |
| Have fun! Stay out of trouble. If you have any questions, E-mail | |
| me. Above all, keep in mind that two things are essential to steal | |
| a car without getting caught: PRACTICE and PREPARATION. Good luck! | |
| -->Spy Ace<-- | |
| spyace@mindvox.phantom.com |