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View Full Version : Dude, Where's My Car? LA Valet Gives Car to Car Thief


Bill
03-13-2015, 5:49am
Newport Beach valet let thief drive off with their car, couple says

Joe's Crab Shack on West Coast Highway in Newport Beach, where a parking valet is said to have let a thief drive off with someone else's car. (Daily Pilot)

By Jeremiah Dobruck
March 12, 2015, 11:46 AM


When a valet parking attendant told Josh Gelle his car had vanished from a Newport Beach restaurant parking lot, his first reaction was to laugh and look for a hidden camera..


"They came up and said, 'We don't know how to tell you this, but we don't have your car,'" Gelle said.

But Gelle and his girlfriend, Jodie Abadie, weren't the target of a TV prank show.

While they were inside Joe's Crab Shack on West Coast Highway on Saturday night, a parking attendant handed over their keys to someone who claimed he'd lost his valet ticket, Abadie explained.

The unidentified man ended up driving off in Gelle's 2014 Mazda CX-9.

"It's a ridiculous situation," said Gelle. "It should never have happened."

Newport Beach police are investigating but department spokeswoman Jennifer Manzella said she'd never heard of a similar crime in her time working in Newport Beach -- even with all the city's restaurants.

Detectives spoke with the valet attendant and other witnesses but haven't turned up the stolen SUV, she said.

While the search continues, Gelle and Abadie say they're frustrated.

The couple changed the locks on their Lake Forest home the night of the theft, and Gelle's workplace also resecured its offices, worrying that whoever took the car would try to use the other keys on the key ring.

"They gave away the entire key set," Gelle said.

Gelle said the valet service, LAZ Parking, paid to rent him a car and change his locks, but is now pushing him to work through his own insurance to get the car replaced.

"It just seems ridiculous to me. I didn't do anything wrong," he said. "I expect them to take the full brunt of everything here."

LAZ Parking representatives declined to discuss the incident but did issue a prepared statement.

"The safety and the service of our customers is our utmost priority," spokeswoman Mary Coursey wrote. "We take this incident very seriously, and once we have all of the facts we will act accordingly."

Jeremiah Dobruck writes for Times Community News


Newport Beach valet let thief drive off with their car, couple says - LA Times (http://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-ln-valet-gives-away-car-20150312-story.html)

Jobaka
03-13-2015, 12:13pm
The couple changed the locks on their Lake Forest home the night of the theft, and Gelle's workplace also resecured its offices, worrying that whoever took the car would try to use the other keys on the key ring.

"They gave away the entire key set," Gelle said.

My car key is always separate from my other keys.

Kerrmudgeon
03-13-2015, 12:38pm
You have to wonder if the thief and the attendant were working together on that one. :skep:

Cybercowboy
03-13-2015, 12:49pm
My dad was running late for his flight at the Albuquerque airport, back around 1980 or so, and as he drove through the terminal to where you turn in your rental car, a guy with a Hertz jacket waved him over to the curb and said he could turn it in for him, no problem. Dad left the car with him and just made his flight. When he got into work the next Monday he had to deal with his boss and Hertz corporate. Yah, stolen. :lol:

On the next trip he was in a hurry to fill the tank up, turn the car in, and make his flight. He filled up at a station near the airport, drove about 2 miles, and the car broke down. Pissed, he managed to get to the airport somehow, and from the terminal called Hertz and told them where they could get their POS car. The next Monday when he came into work he had to deal with his boss and Hertz corporate. Yah, he filled it with diesel. :lol:

ApexOversteer
03-13-2015, 12:52pm
You have to wonder if the thief and the attendant were working together on that one. :skep:

Yeah, because you would think the first rule of valet club would be "NO TICKIE, NO DRIVIE!"

Jobaka
03-13-2015, 12:53pm
My dad was running late for his flight at the Albuquerque airport, back around 1980 or so, and as he drove through the terminal to where you turn in your rental car, a guy with a Hertz jacket waved him over to the curb and said he could turn it in for him, no problem. Dad left the car with him and just made his flight. When he got into work the next Monday he had to deal with his boss and Hertz corporate. Yah, stolen. :lol:

On the next trip he was in a hurry to fill the tank up, turn the car in, and make his flight. He filled up at a station near the airport, drove about 2 miles, and the car broke down. Pissed, he managed to get to the airport somehow, and from the terminal called Hertz and told them where they could get their POS car. The next Monday when he came into work he had to deal with his boss and Hertz corporate. Yah, he filled it with diesel. :lol:

:lol: On his next trip, Dad was stuck at the airport because nobody would rent him a car.

Bill
03-13-2015, 1:54pm
Yeah, because you would think the first rule of valet club would be "NO TICKIE, NO DRIVIE!"

When I was in HS, in band (yep, I was a band geek), our band director used the expression, "no tickie, no washie," No one ever complained, marched, rioted, or otherwise had a hissie fit.

Simpler times.

VITE1
03-13-2015, 2:14pm
Yeah, because you would think the first rule of valet club would be "NO TICKIE, NO DRIVIE!"

:iagree:
Why did they not ask for ID, check the information in the car against the DL and some due diligence.

Cybercowboy
03-13-2015, 2:15pm
:iagree:
Why did they not ask for ID, check the information in the car against the DL and some due diligence.

Inside job? That's my guess.