Swamped by phone thefts, police call on cell providers to allow remote shutdowns

D.C. Police Chief Cathy Lanier, who says electronics-related crimes has “clobbered” her department, wants wireless companies to use existing technology to let people who report stolen phones ask their service providers to shut them down using IMEI numbers, a unique registration akin to a fingerprint.

Police chiefs everywhere say that smartphone robberies are rocketing. They’ve offered cash rewards, set up decoy crews in subway stations and urged iPhone owners to be wary.

But the robberies keep coming. Now, police are expressing their frustration in plain terms, publicly asking regulators and wireless-network operators to allow stolen devices to be shut down remotely through unique identification numbers within them.

That could make it less likely that robbers would point a gun at a victim, knock someone down or steal someone’s smartphone, officials say, because the device’s resale value would plummet.

“This is a national issue,” D.C. Police Chief Cathy Lanier said Friday at a news conference. “We have done all we can at the local level.”

Lanier, who says electronics-related crimes has “clobbered” her department, wants wireless companies to use existing technology to let people who report stolen phones ask their service providers to shut them down using IMEI numbers, a unique registration akin to a fingerprint.

The United Kingdom uses a similar system, Lanier said, and police officials in the United States are asking federal regulators to urge the industry to implement it here.

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Original source.


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