Police-Seized Loot Is Online, and Yes, It's a
StealBy MICHAEL
WILSON

he police auction has always been a
depressed and homely cousin of the chipper yard sale, a gray
Saturday morning in a municipal back lot, grim strangers sifting
through boxes full of other people's losses. Do I hear $2 for the
boy's mountain bike? Very good, sir. What about $3?
Those days are over in New York City, whose Police Department has
joined some 300 others around the country in clearing out crowded
property rooms online, unloading hundreds of television sets and car
stereo speakers, leather coats and compact discs, cellphones and
anything else that once belonged to someone else and is now just
taking up space on a locked storeroom shelf.
With the click of a mouse, one man's home invasion nightmare
becomes another man's bargain bracelet for the wife. Yesterday's
sadness, today's joy.
In late August the New York Police Department signed a contract
with the Property Room, a California company that runs the Web site
propertyroom.com. The site, which auctions just about every
imaginable item that has been seized by the police besides cars,
receives some 12 million hits a month, said Tom Lane, a former New
York City officer and one of the company's founders.
The Web site lists nearly 200,000 registered bidders, far more
than the handful of early risers who used to show up for the Police
Department's live auctions at the otherwise deserted and
remarkably hard to find 1 Police Plaza in Lower Manhattan.
The Property Room keeps half the proceeds from items that sell
for less than $1,000 the vast majority of its inventory and 25
percent from the sale of more expensive items. Buyers pay for
shipping unless they choose to pick up their merchandise from
warehouses in Farmingdale, on Long Island, or Los Angeles.
The company says that about 98 percent of everything it posts
online sells, far more than at live auctions.
So far, the New York Police Department has received three checks
from the company, for a total of about $55,000, police officials
said.
Part eBay and part "Cops" episode, the Web site is alternatively
cheery ("Hot Pursuit Specials!") and puzzling. How did the police
end up with that collectible "I Love Lucy" plate anyway? Where did
those eight candlesticks and a Bible come from? Are they really
selling that hydroponic grow light that staple of dorm-room
marijuana cultivation? How long before they show up to seize it
back?
Daniel Rienzo, a New York landlord, is an enthusiastic bidder.
"It's pennies on the dollar," said Mr. Rienzo, 47. "Right now, I'm
bidding on another go-cart. My house in the Hamptons has private
roads, so I can use go-carts. I want three or four of them."
The origin of the property is unknown to the buyer and the
auctioneer. The site lists seized and found items, as well as
evidence no longer needed at a trial. Any claimed stolen property
has already been returned to its rightful owner; only unclaimed
items are for sale. And anyone who can prove ownership of an item
shown online gets it back free.
Last year, for example, a musician got out of a taxi in Manhattan
that sped off before he could grab his guitar from the trunk. He
said he thought it was gone for good until a friend spotted it on
the site. Musician and guitar were reunited when he called the
company and gave his Social Security number, which was written on
the inside of the guitar.
The variety of items on the site is dizzying. A sword and sheath,
a scope with a red laser, a tote bag from the Metropolitan Museum of
Art. A set of nine pairs of socks, eight cellphones, nine 45-r.p.m.
records.
"I always wonder where it came from," said Walid Halabi, a
handbag designer who lives on the Upper West Side of Manhattan and
who pores over the short descriptions of new items on the site. "I
read it and assume the rest of it."
He ticked off the items he has successfully bid on recently: a
suitcase, a $50 electric range, a refrigerator with an ice
dispenser, a Bell & Howell projector. "It's a beautiful film
projector, an old one, for $22," Mr. Halabi said. "Maybe one day
I'll find one of these old films and project it."
The Property Room was founded under the name stealitback.com,
which still works as a link to the auction site, whose inventory has
been given a shot in the arm with the items from New York. "New York
is a daily pickup," said Thomas Fegan, the company's vice president.
"New York will be huge. They will surpass the rest of the country,
easily. The police make out because we clear out their property
room. The public makes out because they can bid on this stuff. The
taxpayers make out because the money goes back to the area. And we
make out."
Inspector Jack Trabitz of the Police Department's property clerk
division said the company relieved cramped storerooms, made space
for the "never-ending influx of new property" and increased the
chances of a sale. "Nobody was going to come from California to my
auction to buy three T-shirts," he said.
Mr. Rienzo, the landlord, said he spent about $2,000 a month on
the site. "I have kids. I'm buying clothes for kids. It's all brand
new," he said. "I buy Levi's at the store, I'll pay $60. I've gotten
them there for $15."
The jeans notwithstanding, it is hard to tell how much Mr. Rienzo
is really saving, because he is buying things he might not have
bought if he had not seen them online. As the saying goes, he could
fill a room with the money he is saving, except the room is already
filled with stuff he has bought.
"I'm one of their best customers, I believe," Mr. Rienzo said. "I
just bought a kayak."
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