Thieves take ATMs from 58 southwestern Ontario businesses since January 2017: OPP - Action News
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Hamilton

Thieves take ATMs from 58 southwestern Ontario businesses since January 2017: OPP

Police are asking business owners in southwestern Ontario to evaluate the benefits of having an ATM following numerous thefts of the machines from gas stations, restaurants and convenience stores.

It's happened in Hamilton, Brant, Waterloo, Niagara and Owen Sound

Hamilton ATM theft

7 years ago
Duration 1:49
Hamilton police are searching for suspects after an ATM smash and grab.

Police are asking business owners in southwestern Ontario to evaluate the benefits of having an ATM following numerous thefts of the machines from gas stations, restaurants and convenience stores.

It's not hard to break glass with a truck.- Sgt. Dave Rektor, OPP

Thieves have targeted 58 businesses in the Hamilton, Brant, Waterloo, Niagara andOwen Sound since January 2017, Ontario Provincial Police said Friday.

The thieves usually hit sometime between midnight and 5 a.m., ramming a stolen vehicle usually a pickup truck or SUV through the front entrance or windows of the building, wrapping a chain around the ATM and ripping it from the business, police said.

"These guys are driving these trucks right into these businesses, right through the windows plate glass windows and doors and it's not hard to break glass with a truck," said OPP Sgt. Dave Rektor.

"Everybody has these machines with lots of money in them and they're easy targets for thieves," Rektor said.

A set of doors at the Kitchener Memorial Auditorium were smashed in 2016 after thieves broke into the hockey arena and stole two bank machines. (Andrea Bellemare/CBC News)

Damage to a single building ranges from $20,000 to $250,000 and in some cases has left it structurally unsound, OPP said.

Expect trouble on your doorstep if you do have them.- Sgt. Dave Rektor

The loss of the ATM averages about $10,000, plus repair costs and loss of revenue while the store is closed, police said, while the average profit from an ATM is approximately 20 cents for every $20 dispensed.

OPP are encouraging business owners with an ATM to report any suspicious activity.

"It's hit and miss," Rektor said. "There's no predictor of where they're going to hit next."

But police aren't telling business owners not to have ATMs and are providing them with information to help prevent thefts, he said.

'Expect trouble on your doorstep'

"We're just saying you're going to need to be a lot more vigilant and expect trouble on your doorstep if you do have them," Rektor said.

Police also are asking owners of pickup trucks and SUVs to ensure their vehicles are locked at all times and the keys aren't left inside.

"A lot of the pickup trucks that we're dealing with (in the ATM thefts) are stolen, keys left in them, and it's just a big recipe for disaster," Rektor said.

In Hamilton, the most recent example of the phenomenon was at Spring Grill Restaurant on Upper James Street.

Three people used a stolen SUV like a battering ram to smashthrough the front window and knock over the ATM.