'Kia Boys' have struck Montville, police say

Apr. 18—MONTVILLE — Janet Williams, 69, sat in a rocking chair in her home on Cottonwood Lane Thursday and recalled the morning her husband's 2013 Kia Rio was stolen from their driveway by two youths.

Last Saturday, her husband John got up early for work like he usually does, around 4 a.m.

"He walks back inside and goes, 'honey, my car's gone,' " she said, mimicking her husband's deep voice. "The first thing he did was walk to the edge of the driveway, because he thought it might have rolled away.

The theft was one of the most recent in what the department referred to in a Wednesday Facebook post as an increase in "car breaks and stolen vehicles."

"The 'Kia Boy Trend' has been hitting our area with about half of our vehicles being stolen by this method," it said.

Police could not be reached Thursday to provide a number of recent vehicle thefts.

What is the Kia Boy Trend?

"There's plenty of YouTube videos on it," said Norwich police Lt. Christopher Merrill Thursday.

He explained that thieves pop the ignition out and then plug anything with a USB connection, such as cell phone charger or a flash drive, into the USB port in the steering column.

"You put it in and it turns the car on," he said.

Merrill said the department does have lot of instances of certain models of Kias and Hyundais being stolen by this method.

Certain models of 2011-2021 Kias and 2016-2021 Hyundais are the ones susceptible, Montville's release said.

"That's why Hyundai and Kia are subjected to a lot of class action suits," Merrill said.

Last year, Hyundai Motor America and Kia America reached a $200 million settlement in a class action lawsuit that had been filed by car owners. It provided eligible owners with software upgrades to deter theft, the Associated Press reported.

Locating a lost Kia

Merrill said on April 14, the Norwich police midnight shift supervisor informed an officer that Williams' stolen car had just driven by the police station. They found it shortly after at 1 a.m. Sunday.

He said officers attempted to stop the car but the driver fled. A short distance later, officers were able to stop the car but the two people inside ran off. After a foot chase, police arrested two male teenagers, ages 16 and 17.

"They even left their USB cable on the floor of the car," Janet Williams added.

She said her husband also left "his ATM card under some paper towels" in the car, and was relieved the teens never found it. Williams said before the car had been found, she'd called her bank's fraud line and transferred money from the account, but "left $4 in there for them."

Williams, a grandmother herself, joked she may go to the teens' court appearance and ask if their parents are proud of them.

"There's no reason to steal things and there's no reason for smash-and-grabs," she said.

Montville police in the Wednesday release recommended Kia and Hyundai owners contact their local dealerships for a software upgrade, and use steering wheel anti-theft devices to prevent theft. Williams said her car is now at the Kia dealership in Putnam.

d.drainville@theday.com