Senator Chuck Schumer (D-New York) has proposed cell phone carriers permanently disable stolen cellphones, unless and until they are reactivated by the original owner.
Currently, only Verizon Wireless shuts down stolen phones, preventing their easy reactivation. Other carriers only disable internal SIM cards, which are easily replaced by any thief in minutes, and for a fee AT&T and T-Mobile will reactivate any phone. Sprint only disables access to stored contact lists and contents of memory cards that often accompanying modern smartphones. But anyone can reactivate a stolen Sprint or Nextel phone just by claiming to have acquired it legitimately from the former owner and replacing the removable SIM card.
The result of easy reactivation is a thriving black market for stolen phones, particularly in New York.
“Forty-one percent of all property crimes in New York City in the first half of this year were related to cellphones,” Schumer said, noting phones often sell for hundreds of dollars and are back in operation sometimes hours after being stolen.
Schumer says if carriers permanently disabled stolen phones until the rightful owners declare them retrieved, phones would become worthless to would-be thieves.
The senator notes that European carriers use each phone’s unique identification code to monitor the status of the phone. Once reported stolen, overseas carriers will not reactivate a disabled phone without a signed statement from the original owner authorizing the transfer of ownership.
Schumer notes cell phone theft is rising dramatically in New York as more people start carrying increasingly sophisticated smartphones.
In 2009, 10,650 phones were stolen in the city. In 2010 — 10,746. So far this year, more than 11,320 phones have been taken by thieves.
[flv width=”640″ height=”500″]http://www.phillipdampier.com/video/WNYW New York Deactivate Cellphones 8-21-11.flv[/flv]
WNYW-TV in New York has raw video of Sen. Schumer’s press conference on cell phone theft. (10 minutes)
>But anyone can reactivate a stolen Sprint or Nextel phone just by
>claiming to have acquired it legitimately from the former owner and
>replacing the removable SIM card.
I little more fact checking may be in order here. Sprint DOES track the ESN or MEID numbers of the phones and they block stolen phones from both the main Sprint network and the prepaid Boost network. These are not SIM cards and this does render stolen phones into junk. This is well known in the forums at howardforums.com
Unfortunately, in practice this just isn’t what is always happening. I am aware of two folks who had Sprint phones go missing and were reported lost/stolen. Both were quickly reactivated after the new “owners” told Sprint customer service the original owners had “found” their phones and decided to keep the subsequent replacement phones they had obtained, letting go of the phones they thought were gone for good. That was plausible enough for Sprint to reactivate both older phones — a point of fact discovered when the respective insurance companies verified their status. The original owners still got their insurance claim… Read more »