Chop shop gang targeted Porsches and BMWs

Bob Dale
BBC News, South East
CROWN PROSECUTION SERVICE Two dismantled vehicles in a farmhouse, having been stripped of most of their working parts.CROWN PROSECUTION SERVICE
Stolen Porsches, Mercedes and BMWs were among the vehicles stolen and dismantled

Five men who ran chop shops where stolen Porsches, BMWs and Mercedes were dismantled have been jailed.

The cars, which were worth £750,000, were taken apart at a farm near Dunsfold Aerodrome and at a location in Chertsey, both in Surrey.

The parts were sent to a third site in Sawtry, Cambridgeshire.

The men, who all pleaded guilty to conspiracy to receive stolen goods, were sentenced to between six months and 32 months at Guildford Crown Court on Wednesday.

The cars were stolen from sites around the UK and driven to Dunsfold, after having their number plates changed.

During the thefts, a device was used to fool each car's technology into believing its key fob was nearby.

Surrey Police used cameras to track the vehicles, identifying them by make and model.

CROWN PROSECUTION SERVICE A drone image of a farmhouse, with a blue car being driven up to an outbuilding.CROWN PROSECUTION SERVICE
Police tracked the stolen vehicles to a remote farmhouse near Dunsfold Aerodrome

Deividas Jakaitis, 37, from Sheffield, was sentenced to 32 months, Irmantas Lozuraitis, 41, of no fixed address, was jailed for eight months, and Gytis Krisinikas, 26, from Cranleigh in Surrey, was sentenced to seven months.

All three pleaded guilty on the first day of their trial on Monday.

Two other men had already admitted the charges in December.

Eimantas Mikalauskas, 22, from Cranleigh, was jailed for six months, and Raimundas Dumcius, 24, of no fixed address, was sentenced to eight months.

CROWN PROSECUTION SERVICE A dismantled car at a chop shop in Surrey, with the vehicle up on blocks and missing all its engine components.CROWN PROSECUTION SERVICE
Cars and parts worth £750,000 were stolen by the gang

Samantha Mitchell from the Crown Prosecution Service said: "This gang were highly professional, targeting high-value cars and leaving limited forensic evidence.

"They thought that changing number plates on the vehicles as soon as they had been stolen would help them to evade justice, but they were wrong.

"Thanks to a detailed police investigation and the use of cameras to track the cars, the police were able to identify vehicles of the same make and model, all of which made their way to the chop shop in Surrey."

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