FREE SHIPPING when you send us your OEM converters!

NOBLE6

Stolen Catalytic Converter Buyers

Stolen Catalytic Converter Buyers

Road buyers drive the market for stolen catalytic converters, enticing criminals to steal catalytic converters from your vehicles. This blog will explain who these road buyers are and who enables this criminal activity.


These roaming road buyers play a large role in contributing to the theft of catalytic converters. These buyers travel city to city and state to state in search of acquiring catalytic converters for cash. Most of the time road buyers purchase strictly with cash because it is untraceable, and as a result, this helps to enable criminals to steal converters.

How They Get Away With It

PGM Catalytic Converter RecyclingThe methods these road buyers use are relatively simple. They send vans to automotive muffler and repair shops and then bid on their scrap converters. What they collect from these shops are legitimate because the shops obtain them through clients needing replacement converters. There is no issue with that until you figure out they are using these shops to legitimize the stolen converters they also buy. By mixing the legitimate scrap with the stolen, it covers their tracks even further. These repair shops need to recognize they may be enabling this criminal activity when selling converters to roaming road buyers for cash. 

Where They Purchase Stolen Converters

Road buyers purchase illegitimate converters by scouring Facebook groups, eBay, Craigslist, OfferUp, social media direct messaging, and other online forums informing the audience when traveling through a specific city. The transaction may consist of a meeting spot where converters become sold out of someone’s trunk for cash. Most often then not this type of dealing is illegal, and both parties are aware of the criminal consequences they would face if caught by law enforcement. Since road buyers generally pass through cities, only pay with cash, and launder through legitimate sources, it makes it incredibly difficult to detect them committing the crime of buying stolen merchandise (also known as fencing). 

Stop Enabling Criminals From Stealing Converters 

Some of these road buyers are licensed, while others are not. Those who are not, do not comply with local requirements when buying converters. If you own a repair shop, do not support this activity. Always make sure that you are selling your catalytic converters to a reputable company. Take a little time and do some research. Ask yourself, do they have a website? Do they have a team of professionals on staff? Recognize if you are dealing with someone who is circumventing our nation’s anti-money laundering laws. By dealing with a professional organization, you cut out the risk of enabling criminals and will probably make more money with your converters!


 

RESOURCES

Catalyst Recycling
Blog

Catalyst Recycling, Market Dynamics and the Future of Precious Metals with Craig Ostroff

In this insightful session, we are joined by Craig Ostroff, the Global Sales Director PGM Refining and Chemicals at BASF. Craig brings over 37 years…

Automotive Recycling
Blog

Platinum’s Promising Future: Optimism Amid Supply Risks from Dr. Jonathan Butler

In the ever-evolving world of precious metals, platinum, palladium, and rhodium hold significant positions due to their diverse industrial applications and market dynamics. This blog…

Catalytic Converter Recycling
Blog

2024 Platinum, Palladium, and Rhodium Market Trends: Insights from Dr. Jonathan Butler

The 48th Annual IPMI Conference in Orlando, Florida, brought together industry leaders, experts, and stakeholders from across the precious metals sector. One of the highlights…