Car cloning scam (also known as VIN Cloning, vehicle cloning or VIN Number Cloning) are quite
widespread when it comes to selling stolen vehicles (the cloned cars) to unsuspecting buyers,
as a rule by the means of classified ads or on Craigslist.
Car cloning is a vehicle equivalent of what is known as identity theft.
A “clean” VIN number is all the thief needs to know to run such a scam. Thieves get the clean VINs
from many different sources: the Internet, parking cars or directly from the seller
pretending that they are buyers who need a VIN to get a car history report to protect themselves
(and they may actually need the report to make sure the title is clean!). They then make
counterfeit tags and stickers with the “clean” VIN and place them on stolen cars turning them
into car clones. They may also alter the VIN
that was printed on the vehicle by filing off or molding the numbers and digits. In this case,
some traces of the VIN-job may still remain and a careful person may notice them when
inspecting the vehicle.
Car cloning may be used not just with stolen vehicles but also with the ones that have a “bad” title (Total Loss, Lemon, etc). These cars are not roadworthy but the dealers make a good income from selling such cloned cars as good ones.
What is really bad about this sort of VIN scam is that different states to not share this type of information with one another so the thieves who clone cars easily get away with this. What can be recommended to used car buyers in such a situation is to run VIN number check, get the vehicle history report and see in how many states the car has been registered. If it changed many states that may be a serious warning sign, even if the report does not show VIN cloning records.
If you are considering buying any if these you are in the risk group.
The car is confiscated from you and you lose the money you have paid. And it’s a lucky escape if you are not prosecuted for driving a stolen vehicle.
traces of being altered, files or molded. - Match it with the car’s documents, take a note of all discrepancies, typos and misspelled words. - Run VIN check and check the history of this VIN. Try to buy the vehicles only from local sellers, avoid those who ship vehicles from other states or countries. - Take a note of if the vehicle has been registered in different states. That is typical for cloned cars.
If you suspect you are being sold a cloned vehicle you should inform the police about it. Note: In addition, stolen VIN numbers may be used in car key cloning scam