Used car scam: four police officers suspended over involvement in odometer tampering racket

Police officers suspended after investigation links them to Japanese car import odometer tampering scam

Investigations into the racket have led to the suspension of four police officers
Investigations into the racket have led to the suspension of four police officers

Four police officers have been suspended over their involvement in the alleged odometer tampering scam of Japanese car imports.

The Times of Malta reported the officers were suspended around 10 days ago after investigations linked them to the case.

It is not yet clear whether the investigations revealed shortcomings from their end, or whether they had a more active involvement in the case.

MaltaToday exclusively revealed last year how hundreds of consumers were sold second-hand Japanese cars with tampered mileage gauges.

Cars bought from Japanese bidding markets on the cheap because of their high mileage, would then be sold in Malta – however these had their odometers tampered to show low mileages.

An exercise carried out by MaltaToday on a sample of 18 cars flagged by multiple industry sources, revealed discrepancies ranging between 30,000km and 130,000km between the original mileage and the one registered in Malta.

Crucially, industry sources told MaltaToday that the racket started the moment the cars arrived in Malta. When cars are offloaded at Laboratory Wharf in the Grand Harbour, the police must fill in the Vehicle 5 (VEH 005) customs and police inspection form.

The manual form contains several fields, including one where the car’s dashboard mileage is listed.

However, it appeared that dealers often used the excuse that the car battery was drained throughout their voyage at sea on the cargo ship, preventing the dashboard mileage from being read by the inspecting police officers.

In these instances, the inspector left the mileage field blank so that the dealer could fill it in later, when the car is restarted using a booster. Sources indicated that although there may be genuine cases of car batteries that fall flat, many times these would have been disconnected by the dealer.

Rokku and Tal-Qasab have continued to operate, despite being interrogated by the police last year. It is still unclear when, or if, they will be charged.

Following the MaltaToday investigation, Transport Malta increased its scrutiny of documentation presented by car dealers who import used vehicles from Japan.

The transport regulator later stepped in to supplant the process previously manned by police officers, to verify the mileage declared in documentation from importers, with data available in JEVIC databases.

Several consumers bitten by the scam also took their case to the consumer affairs authority, demanding compensation from the dealers.

Last June MaltaToday reported police bail for the used-car dealers who are being investigated over alleged odometer tampering has been lifted. They had also been issued with an attachment order.

Attachment orders are usually issued in money laundering cases. The court orders that all moneys and other movable property owed or pertaining or belonging to the suspect be taken out of suspect’s control and placed in the care of a third party.

Following the MaltaToday investigation, Transport Malta increased its scrutiny of documentation presented by car dealers who import used vehicles from Japan.