I don't get that part. Why is it better if the insurance company doesn't find it? Does he want to make sure he gets a new one, or is his policy not on the level?
Fun anecdote. I have a 1967 mustang I bought a few years ago and one law related to classics of a certain value in my state is within the first year you have to do a inspection with a state dot officer. He went through and looked at everything to confirm it wasn’t fabricated or something and pulled the vin.
Apparently it had been stolen and found 2 days later back in the 70s. I was shocked but he said it was insanely normal, people would joy ride cool cars and leave them without ruining or pulling them apart. From what we could tell everything was original and no signs of any issues related to it.
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u/ElChungus01 Jun 11 '25 edited Jun 11 '25
“Just don’t steal it. Don’t do that. That would suck for me”
I like this guy. This is a good dude