Our daughter's car was broken into last night. The way they got in was through the keyless entry keypad. They didn't even damage the car's finish. My daughter had left her iPad inside a black laundry bag along with her clothes on the floor in the back seat. She had brought her laundry home to wash it and put her iPad inside when she carried out to her car when she left our house. They found the iPad and a pint jar she had in the door pocket where she kept some change, about $30 was in there. They also broke the one music CD she had in her center console for some reason.
The police officer told my daughter that it is actually safer to leave her car unlocked and just not keep any loose valuables inside. That way would-be thieves wouldn't have to damage her vehicle to get inside. This seems reasonable and in fact is part of the reason we rarely lock the doors on our country home.
The question I have with this is if she followed this advice and someone got in and let's say damaged the interior by removing the sound system or something, would the auto insurance deny coverage because the car was left unlocked?
The police officer told my daughter that it is actually safer to leave her car unlocked and just not keep any loose valuables inside. That way would-be thieves wouldn't have to damage her vehicle to get inside. This seems reasonable and in fact is part of the reason we rarely lock the doors on our country home.
The question I have with this is if she followed this advice and someone got in and let's say damaged the interior by removing the sound system or something, would the auto insurance deny coverage because the car was left unlocked?