The Pederson family may have taken inspiration from the case of the 8-fingered Skyline thief, and have turned to the web to try to recover a stolen 1959 Corvette once owned by their late uncle. After saving his whole life and finally purchasing the red and white 'Vette, the uncle discovered he had cancer and died in late 2007. Only two months later the car was swiped from its Ronkonkoma, NY garage and hasn't been seen since. A VIN search turns up registration in Florida, but you know how accurate those thing can be these days. So, just in case you're in the market for vintage Corvettes (Junkman, we're looking right at you) keep your eyes peeled for a car with the following description:

1959 Corvette Roadster. Red with White Coves, Red interior and a white hard top. The Corvette is an automatic with spinner wheels and white wall tires. VIN J59S100698.We'll pass on any leads we get, and hopefully this comes out with a Law & Order-style happy ending. Someone cue Fred Thompson. [Hemmings]













Comments
"the car was swiped from it's Ronkonkoma, NY garage"
wtf is up with Ronkonkoma?? That's the same town the General Lee was stolen from last year
And I quote:
[www.dodgepedia.org]
It's more than likely not red anymore or is in pieces.
I think we should institute the Saudi form of punishment for thieves. Chop off their hands, without anesthesia! (Ok, not for a stolen pack of gum, but anything more valuable than, say, a Laptop Computer)
Chop one of his nuts off and make him drive a pedal-powered Subaru.
Did I misread the description, or does this classic Corvette actually have spinners? I might regurgitate my breakfast.
@MazdaEric: No - its whats up with New York, I swear this place is filled with dam dirty tool wielding apes!
Reading the background history of this car, the story is especially sad. The chances of recovery are slim, but there is always hope.
[www.cbsnews.com]
Damn shame (that it has an automatic)
But seriously, I hope this works.
But on the other hand, if it does work (again), we're going to have a rash of stolen vehicle posts on the web, and the effectiveness will wear off.
@combat chuck: Spinners to a late '50s through the mid '60s Chevy aren't the same thing as those stupid wheels that keep turning after the car stops. Back then, they were like these three-blade ornaments that bolted onto the hubcap, kinda like the spiked chariot wheel in Ben Hur. I believe the 'Vette pictured has a set of spinners.
Here's a resto parts page for Chevy spinners: [www.paddockparts.com]
@combat chuck: I think the spinners they are talking about are the classic kind that are like propellers in the center of the hubcap. You can see them in the pictures.
@WilliamG.: I guess you beat me to it.
@WilliamG.: @devilock138: Thanks. That makes me feel much better about society.
@smalleyxb122: Being a Harley owner, I found 'LostRides' a stolen motorcycle registry for a friend - who sadly lost his gorgeous 79 shovelhead. That site has been up like 10++ years now, I'm surprised corvette owners don't have the same. A simple check before you purchase, and you could take bite outta crime.
It won't stop chopshops but it can nab interstate retitling tomfoolery.
I'd bet that it's in a developing country by now; Latin America, Africa, Asia or Eastern Europe.
I think I saw Memphis Raines driving it
Jonny Liebermans's making a run for The Czech again.
@muleshoe: I read that with the accent of the guy who makes the furniture (from the modern one)... I dont know why.
Heyahs yah list... I wunt 50 caaahs
Let's hope it doesn't show up in one of Murilee's Project Car Hell faceoffs.
@muleshow: I guess I wasn't the only that watched Gone In 60 Seconds last night.
Yep got to check Carfax, the police, and autotrader.com for leads. Most likely way unless they are smart and try to unload it quick on a local dealer for them to deal with.
@devilock138: They're actually supposed to be called, "knockoffs," and some cars had them instead of lugnuts/bolts. Cars like the Ferrari Enzo and the Jaguar XJ220 have similar arrangements, albeit with a single, giant nut, but they function the same way.
The reason you'd have the wings on a knockoff is to pound on it with a mallet to loosen or tighten the things, so you could change a wheel.
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