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Insurance 'sting' aims to catch American cargo thieves during
their peak season

 


TWO cargo investigators, working for insurers, The Travelers Companies, are deploying a truck with a "sting trailer" to catch cargo thieves, who the FBI says cause US$15 billion to $30 billion in losses every year.

Somewhere in America, the tractor-trailer loaded with hidden surveillance equipment is parked at a truck stop or warehouse while authorities wait for thieves to steal it, reports The Associated Press.

"It's like fishing," said investigator DZ Patterson. "You've got your worm in the water, but there are hundreds of other worms out there. They have to pick yours."

The classic problem with cargo theft, or pilferage or pillage, is that when the theft is discovered, with a missing box or crate of cameras, it is nearly impossible to determine where it occurred, much less who done it.

Picture a shipment of electronics from Chongqing, which turns, up 20 boxes short at a distribution centre in Savannah, Georgia month later. The first question is where did the theft occur, but before we can answer that we must know where the cargo has been.

In this hypothetical case it left China on an overland rail journey through Kazakhstan, through Russia, Belarus, Poland and Germany where it taken by ship to Savannah, where the theft was discovered.

But was it stolen at the Chinese factory, or by bands of nomadic thieves known to board and break into containers in central Asian and Russia? Or did the theft happen where the containers must change rolling stock to accommodate the Russian rail gauge or later on when that had to done again to accommodate the EU gauge?

Or was it the trucker going to Hamburg, or the docker there or the one of the in Southampton or Le Havre where the ship called before heading to Norfolk, Charleston and finally Savannah.

Even with the United States, it is next to impossible to know where such thefts occur and who the culprits are. That's why the Travelers "sting trailer" provides an ability to strike back and the constant scourge of cargo thieves plaguing the supply chain.

Law enforcement and the insurance industry are fighting back by tempting thieves with "sting trailers" laden with cameras and GPS tracking devices, hidden within both the trailers and the inventory they contain.

FreightWatch International, an Austin, Texas security company, says thieves prefer nondescript trailers that would be hard to identify after being stolen, so it's best if a brand name or distinctive markings are emblazoned on the sides.

Hidden cameras have recorded which locks are problematic for crooks, leading anti-fraud specialists to recommend truck owners install the highest-tech locks. And it's best to hide GPS tracking systems, because the criminals know how to disable them.

Travelers' sting trailer was developed in 2008 at the company's Windsor, Connecticut, lab and is equipped with $100,000 worth of surveillance gear. Law enforcement agencies nationwide have used it hundreds of times, resulting in dozens of arrests.

"The purpose is to assist law enforcement in targeting organised cargo rings," said investigator Scott Cornell. "Every time the sting trailer breaks up a ring, everyone in supply chain in that area benefits."

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