Checking VIN Numbers . . . | FerrariChat

Checking VIN Numbers . . .

Discussion in 'Ferrari Discussion (not model specific)' started by 2DUCKS, Oct 2, 2008.

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, Skimlinks, and others.

  1. 2DUCKS

    2DUCKS Karting

    Feb 20, 2006
    132
    California
    Full Name:
    K
    Came upon this article in NY Times and thought I shared it.

    This is one way to check for VIN number to see if it was stolen/salvage title.
    And it is FREE.


    https://www.nicb.org/cps/rde/xchg/nicb/hs.xsl/vincheck.html



    Article:

    http://www.nytimes.com/2008/09/28/automobiles/28VINCHECK.html?ref=automobiles

    Motoring
    After 16 Years of Promises, Better Background Checks for Used Cars
    Sign In to E-Mail or Save This Print Reprints Share
    LinkedinDiggFacebookMixxYahoo! BuzzPermalink

    By CHRISTOPHER JENSEN
    Published: September 26, 2008
    BY next April consumers may finally get something promised by Congress in 1992: a comprehensive database of used vehicles that were stolen or so badly damaged that they were declared total losses.

    Last Monday, a federal judge in San Francisco ruled in favor of three consumer groups that had sued to force the government to carry out the long-delayed consumer protection law. The law requires a listing, the National Motor Vehicle Title Information System, that insurance companies, junkyards and salvage yards must supply with the vehicle identification numbers of vehicles that have been written off.

    Judge Marilyn Hall Patel rejected the Justice Department’s claim that no legal action was needed, ordering the department to have the system available to consumers by March 31, 2009.

    Details of the program, including whether consumers will be charged a fee for a vehicle check, have not been worked out. It was unclear whether the government would appeal.

    The suit was brought by Public Citizen of Washington, Consumers for Auto Reliability and Safety of Sacramento and Consumer Action of San Francisco in the United States District Court for the Northern District of California.

    Currently, few insurance companies report this type of information to databases that consumers can check. Making that information available on the national system will help consumers by “breaking the dam of insurance secrecy about wrecked cars,” said Bernard E. Brown, a lawyer in Fairway, Kan., who specializes in automotive cases.

    Services like Carfax and Experian AutoCheck, which charge a fee to check a vehicle identification number, get virtually all their information from state records. Critics say that leaves gaps.

    One resource that does use insurance company data is the free VINCheck service of the National Insurance Crime Bureau, an industry association. But 25 of the 136 participating insurers do not provide information about totaled vehicles, the bureau said. Officials for several companies that are listed as not providing information said they were unaware of the omissions.

    Indeed, the bureau’s Web site, nicb.org, warns that the database does not have information on every vehicle. VINCheck is still valuable to consumers, said Frank Scafidi, a spokesman, but he acknowledged that more information would be better. “If it were up to me, they would all be doing it,” he said.

    Kenneth Klein, the owner of Consumers’ Auto Detective, a collision consulting service in Elgin, Ill., said he ran through the VINCheck system the identification numbers of 88 vehicles he knew were so badly wrecked that they should have salvage titles — and 28 came back with clean titles.

    Mr. Scafidi acknowledged VINCheck’s weaknesses but said it covered about 75 percent of insured vehicles.

    The insurance industry denied it was keeping data from the public. David F. Snyder, vice president and assistant general counsel for the American Insurance Association, said the information was for the use of insurance companies. “It wasn’t collected for purposes of public disclosure,” he said.
     
  2. Tony K

    Tony K Formula 3

    Jun 7, 2006
    1,779
    USA
    Full Name:
    Tony K.
    Great! Thanks for the link! :)
     
  3. 134282

    134282 Four Time F1 World Champ
    BANNED

    Aug 3, 2002
    40,647
    California
    Full Name:
    Carbon McCoy
    Great article, thanks for posting it. But the NICB VIN check site is worthless. It says nothing about the F50 that was stolen from Algar five years ago.
     

Share This Page