Unlicensed B.C. car dealer rolled back dozens of odometers, regulator says - Action News
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British Columbia

Unlicensed B.C. car dealer rolled back dozens of odometers, regulator says

Wild Grizzly Transport and Pasquale Zampieri have lost an application to become a wholesaler in the province after a regulator's investigation found they tampered with odometers on dozens of cars sold in just one year.

Company co-director Pasquale Zampieri says investigation's findings are 'not true'

Pasquale "Charlie" Zampieri is seen outside B.C. Supreme Court during a dispute over a separate legal issue in 2013. Zampieri is co-director of Wild Grizzly Transport, which was found to have meddled with odometers on dozens of cars in 2017. (CBC)

If you've read Matilda, you're familiar with the idea. If you haven't read it, we'll catch you up.

In the children's novel, written by Roald Dahlin 1988, the titularcharacter's father is a crooked car salesman who usesa high-speedelectric drill to run odometers backwards on second-hand cars he wanted to sell.

Fast forward 30-odd yearsand a real, modern-day West Vancouver business and one of its directors are in trouble with B.C. regulators for a similartrick.

Wild Grizzly Transport andPasqualeZampieri have lost an application to become a wholesalerin the province after theregulator'sinvestigationfound they tampered with odometers on dozens of cars sold in just one year. Zampieri denies the allegations.

In one case, according to the Vehicle Sales Authority of B.C.,more than 200,000 kilometres were knockedoff a 10-year-old minivan.

'Curbing' and 'tampering'

Zampieri had already been selling cars without a licence a practice known as"curbing" when the investigation began last year.

It compared auction records with Insurance Corporation of British Columbia (ICBC)tax transfer forms and found Wild Grizzlytampered with 37 of 39 vehicles sold in 2017.

One KiaSedonadropped more than 60 per cent of its mileage, going from 375,233 kilometres at auction to 138,380 by the time it got toICBC.

Another 2002 Ford F-150 went from 300,952 kilometres down to 152,900 a difference of nearly half.

A car odometre is shown reading 156,933 kilometres.
An investigation by the Vehicle Sales Authority of B.C. found Wild Grizzly tampered with odometers on 37 cars it sold in 2017. (CBC)

Ian Christman, a registrar with the authority, said there were so many varied discrepancies on the vehicles' mileageshe couldn't believe it was onlymistakes in the paperwork when he made his decision in May.

Zampieri, who also uses the first name Charlie, denied fiddling with odometers at all when reached by CBC News on Monday.

"Not true," he said during a phone call. "I'm not discussing that [further]because it's with the law courts right now. I have a lawyer."

Zampieri would not givehis lawyer's name or their contact information to CBC News.

Pasquale (Charlie) Zampieri has been ordered to pay more than $11,000 to the Vehicle Sales Authority of B.C. to cover the cost of its investigation, but a spokesperson for the regulator said he had not done so as of Feb. 4, 2019. (CBC)

Wild Grizzly's wholesaler application was rejected Dec. 28.

The businessandZampieri himselfhave been banned from reapplying for a licence for 10 years.Zampieriis also barredfrom so much as"being involved" with another registered dealer in B.C. for the same time period.

$11Kowed

DougLonghurst, a spokesperson for the sales authority, said odometer tampering does happen, but rarelynowadays.

He said accurate odometer data is simply logged in more places than it used to be: dealership records, body shop files, car history reports,ICBCdataand sometimes in a secondary data set inside newer vehicles themselves.

"There's more opportunities for people to learn if there is a problem," said Longhurst, adding he's only ever heard of two cases of mileage meddling in his 12 years with the authority.

Zampieriwas ordered to pay the authority more than$11,300 in costs to cover its investigation as part of his penalty last year. Longhurstsaidhehasn't done so, despite a compliance order from B.C. Supreme Court.

Tampering with odometers is an offence under the B.C. Motor Dealer Act, but can also be prosecuted as criminal fraud.Zampieriis not facing criminal charges.