A 20-year-old man is behind bars after police found his car full of stolen car parts.
Police say the man targeted at least nine cars in one month across Thousand Oaks and Simi Valley.
It is a sinking feeling to walk out to your car and find it making a deafening roar. For many drivers, that noise is the first sign that a thief has crawled underneath to steal a vital part.
A 20-year-old man from Los Angeles is now in custody after police linked him to a series of these thefts. He was caught with the tools of the trade and a stack of cash in his vehicle.
Officers stopped the man while he was driving through the area. Inside his car, they found electric saws, drills, and car jacks. These are the exact tools needed to cut a catalytic converter off a car in seconds.
Police say he hit at least nine different cars in just one month. He is currently being held on a $75,000 bail.
What the evidence shows
- 20-year-old suspect from Los Angeles.
- 9 cars targeted in one month.
- $5,600 in cash found in the vehicle.
- Electric saws and drills recovered.
- $75,000 bail set for the suspect.
The bigger question
Why are these parts so easy to steal and sell? Catalytic converters contain precious metals that can be sold for quick cash on the black market.
This crime is not just about the cost of the part. It leaves regular people with a car that is illegal to drive and expensive to fix. We should ask why these parts are not better protected by car makers.
The other side
The suspect has not yet issued a public statement regarding the charges. He is currently awaiting his day in court to address the evidence presented by the police.
What happens now
Drivers in the area should remain alert and park in well-lit spots when possible. This arrest may stop a string of thefts, but the high value of these parts means the risk remains for many car owners.
What we still don't know
- Who was buying the stolen parts from the suspect?
- Were there other people working with him on these thefts?
- How many other victims have not yet reported their losses?
Transparency notes
Published: May 22, 2026. No major post-publication update has been logged.
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Sources
External source links were not provided in this article body. Our editors reference publicly available materials and update stories as new verified information arrives.
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