Atlanta Journal: LoJack Car Alarm Review (July 29, 1998)
"Car thieves have no way of knowing whether a car has the device, which can be hidden in as many as 30 different places on the vehicle. Professionals wary of LoJack have begun to leave stolen vehicles in public lots to cool off.... If police don't quickly recover the car, the crooks reclaim it, strip it or send it away."
Fortune Magazine: LoJack Car Alarm Review (Oct 27, 1997)
"LoJack has offered a silent--and more effective--alternative to the detested noise for the past 11 years. Unlike car alarms, LoJack doesn't try to prevent auto theft directly. Instead, the radio-based homing device aids in the retrieval of stolen cars, and it does this extremely well."
Washington Post: LoJack Car Alarm Review (1993)
"A Virginia State Police sergeant was pretending to be a car thief, hiding behind a shopping strip. The transmitter, situated in a hidden recessed part of his car, was silent. But it revealed his trail to his pursuers. In two minutes, every officer with a sensor found him. 'If someone is carjacked, bingo!' said Sgt. Fred Clark, who posed as the criminal. 'We're no longer looking for a needle in the haystack. This tells us where to go. It gives us everything but the address.'"
Forbes Magazine: LoJack Car Alarm Review (May 11, 1992)
"...and install the LoJack Electronic Tracking System, the odds improve to 95 percent you'll get your car back, often within hours and typically with little damage. Police praise the system, and insurers offer rebates on LoJack-equipped cars."
To learn more about LoJack click here.