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Dealership Remotely Disables A Car Over A $200 Fee (www.cbc.ca) 420

An anonymous reader quotes the CBC: A car dealership in Sherbrooke, Quebec, may have broken the law when it used a GPS device to disable the car of a client who was refusing to pay an extra $200 fee, say consumer advocates consulted by CBC News. Bury, Quebec resident Daniel Lallier signed a four-year lease for a Kia Forte LX back in May from Kia Sherbrooke. Two months later, the 20-year-old's grandmother offered to buy the car outright when he lost his job and couldn't make his weekly payments. After settling the balance and paying a $300 penalty, Lallier said, the dealership told him he would have to pay an additional $200 to remove a GPS tracker that had been installed on the car...

Lallier said there was no mention of the removal fee in the contract and he disputed having to pay it."I just find it absurd that over $13,000 was spent on this vehicle and we still have to pay $200 more to have their device removed," he told CBC. After Lallier refused to pay the fee, a mechanic notified him by text message that his car was being remotely disabled until the dealership recovered the device and $200 fee. "I went outside and tested my car, and it wouldn't work at all...and I got angry," Lallier said.

Lallier had finally started a new job and was headed to work, according to the CBC. The president of the Automobile Protection Association says the dealership's action was clearly illegal, since once the balance is paid off, "it's not your car anymore."
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Dealership Remotely Disables A Car Over A $200 Fee

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  • A new business model: We'll remove that pesky fucker for only 100 bucks!

  • Outrageous (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Dog-Cow ( 21281 ) on Wednesday August 30, 2017 @05:15AM (#55108659)

    If you leave your property within an item you transfer to someone else, you should pay, not be paid, to recover said item. The dealership should be sued for extortion.

    • by Mitreya ( 579078 )

      If you leave your property within an item you transfer to someone else, you should pay, not be paid, to recover said item.

      I find it more outrageous that the car can be disabled remotely.
      This use-case was at most moderately malicious compared to what else can be done with such control.

    • I think the word you mean is PROSECUTED, actually?

  • Sue them (Score:5, Interesting)

    by bool2 ( 1782642 ) on Wednesday August 30, 2017 @05:19AM (#55108665) Homepage

    He should sue them:

    1. For disabling his car. The dealership did not own that car so their actions were illegal.
    2. For lack of notice. Even if the dealership thought they were entitled to this action, they were not entitled to do it without proper notice served.
    3. For intimidating him into letting them take *his* GPS tracker/remote immobiliser device from *his* car.

    As this is Slashdot, I feel obliged to say my first action would be to find that device and attempt to remove it myself. I would keep that box as a trophy.

    • Re:Sue them (Score:5, Insightful)

      by SharpFang ( 651121 ) on Wednesday August 30, 2017 @05:36AM (#55108721) Homepage Journal

      Also, accessing a device which is not your property (anymore) remotely, and using it with malicious intent. A.K.A. hacking.

      Connected with extortion (like ransomware, "pay us, and we withdraw our actions.").

      • by pz ( 113803 )

        oohooohooh --- now you can use unlawful access of a computer against them!

        (only half joking; if the article is true, the dealership should be sued to the fullest extent of the law, including damages for things like emotional distress, lost wages, impact on career, etc.)

    • His first action should be to file a criminal complaint for fraud and whatever they can make stick like some sort of "reckless endangerment" charge if he was on the road when it happened. "I'll see you in court" should start with the criminal and then go into the civil here if at all possible.

    • Also since the GPS tracker was installed into the vehicle and the vehicle transferred ownership and then the stealership accessed it without authorization he should press charges for unauthorized access to a computer system (actually many counts; add up all the impacted computerized circuits in the path of the ECU, ignition module, CAN bus network, OBD network, and the GPS tracker/immobilization unit itself) plus wire fraud. Those will have some serious teeth. :-D

  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday August 30, 2017 @05:53AM (#55108769)

    Their toll free phone number is 1-888-258-7467

    Time for an "inquiry" into their practices. If enough /. members call it will definitely cost them more than the $200.00 they did this for...

    http://www.kiasherbrooke.com/fr/contactez-nous

    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      I'd recommend pausing the witchhunt. The dealership is saying it wasn't them. From a google review:

      We assume you are leaving a negative review because of the recent news coverage concerning Mr. . It would be important to understand that the CBC has unfortunately mis-identified Kia Sherbrooke as the seller. The car was in fact sold by a third party. If, indeed you are leaving your review because of this subject, we ask you to please remove your review as Kia Sherbrooke is not implicated in the sale. We simply share the same adresse as the third party. We are sorry for the confusion this has caused.

      We are currently in contact with CBC to clarify the situation.

      • by null etc. ( 524767 ) on Wednesday August 30, 2017 @11:56AM (#55111243)

        Kia Sherbrooke is not implicated in the sale. We simply share the same adresse as the third party

        Let me guess, the car was leased and disabled by "Kia Sherbrooke Separate Leasing Entity Not The Dealership LLC".

  • Sigh (Score:5, Interesting)

    by ledow ( 319597 ) on Wednesday August 30, 2017 @06:09AM (#55108833) Homepage

    Actually, according to the documents I have on my new car, once I have paid at least 50% of the balance, it's mine and they can't take it from me. If they want to recover from there, they can only pursue me as per a normal debt.

    After 50%, it literally states that it's legally my property. Sure, if I refuse to pay, they know I should have a car, but they can't just repossess it immediately. Before 50%, if I refused to make payments, they could disable it, recover it, just walk up to it with a manufacturer's key and take it - it's still theirs.

    And it counts the deposit and the finance, so you actually own the car earlier than halfway through the payment term.

    Now, it's a bog-standard personal car purchase, so I imagine that that's pretty standard for the UK/EU or that it's a statutory ruling that they have to abide by and tell you.

    • "Actually, according to the documents I have on my new car, once I have paid at least 50% of the balance, it's mine and they can't take it from me. If they want to recover from there, they can only pursue me as per a normal debt."

      That's weird. In the US, you own the car immediately but the entity who loaned you the money has a lien on the car. If you get behind on payments the lien might make it possible for them to repossess the car and sell it to help pay off the loan.

      The main function of the lien is to

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • Asinine behavior (Score:5, Informative)

    by onyxruby ( 118189 ) <onyxruby&comcast,net> on Wednesday August 30, 2017 @06:41AM (#55108939)

    Asinine behavior like this is what inspires people to write up how to's for removing these things. Turns out a fair number of these how to's already exist.

    http://www.instructables.com/i... [instructables.com]
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
    https://trackimo.com/disable-g... [trackimo.com]

  • by MiliusXP ( 861816 ) on Wednesday August 30, 2017 @06:45AM (#55108951)
    On they Facebook panic button "We assume you are leaving a negative review because of the recent news coverage concerning Mr. Lallier. It would be important to understand that the CBC has unfortunately mis-identified Kia Sherbrooke as the seller. The car was in fact sold by a third party. If, indeed you are leaving your review because of this subject, we ask you to please remove your review as Kia Sherbrooke is not implicated in the sale. We simply share the same adresse as the third party. We are sorry for the confusion this has caused. We are currently in contact with CBC to clarify the situation."
    • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday August 30, 2017 @07:04AM (#55109019)

      If they share the same address, the "3rd party" is probably just another division of the same company.

    • by H3lldr0p ( 40304 )

      We share the address but it's not our fault.

      That's a new one. Also, how does a dealership get involved with a third party deal like that? The article even said it was one of their techs who notified the new owner. Something ain't right here.

    • I looked at their address on Google Earth - 4339 Boul Bourque, Sherbrooke, QC J1N 1S4, Canada

      There is NO other entity at that address. It's fully and wholly a Kia Dealership lot, both from satellite and street views. The only thing even CLOSE is an alignment shop, across the street, but that one seems to only do alignments for large vehicles (semi trailers, judging by what I could see inside the open bay doors.)

      The dealership, like most car dealerships on the planet, are lying their asses off.

    • I'm currently looking at their Google Streetview and I'm having a hard time accepting their explanation. If it's not them, who is the third party? Their finance company? If they were really that innocent, why don't they share the name of that third party sharing that address with them?

  • dealerships are scum with there hidden / BS fees.

    Hell some even did shit like after the sale called and said we forgot to add this fee or we sold the car for to low of an price and if you don't pay up we will void the sale with the car being marked as stolen

  • In the UK, it is quite common to sign a *lease deal* for a new car. However, this type of "ownership process" rarely involves the dealership directly.

    Instead [here in the UK] the client typically either enters into a hire-purchase type of agreement with the vendor of the vehicle [which in this case would be Kia Canada, Inc], or they enter into a quite separate leasing contract with a third party leasing company. Then what happens is the leasing company pays the dealership the ticket price of the car [som
  • Owner should find a really successful attorney and push to have the stealership prosecuted for unauthorized access to a computer and for wire fraud; both of those have some serious teeth and could land the mechanic in prison indefinitely.

  • The extortion/blackmail isn't even the main point, if it wasn't mentioned in the contract, he bought the device with the car, just as he bought the water pump and battery and he should get the data and software needed to operate it himself if the car ever gets stolen.

  • So that article makes the point:

    >> the dealership's action was clearly illegal, since once the balance is paid off, "it's not your car anymore."

    Yet no-one seems to care that GM and Tesla are building exactly the same tech into their cars in a very non-optional way. You literally can't buy any Chevrolet, Cadillac, Buick, or GMC without Onstar already installed.

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