Saturday, October 20, 2007 - Page updated at 12:00 AM
Car thief takes "bait" — on video
Seattle Times Eastside bureau

GREG GILBERT / THE SEATTLE TIMES
The car thief, Jason Scott Collins, 27, of Kent, ducks to avoid gunfire from police officers.

MIKE SIEGEL / THE SEATTLE TIMES
Police check out the stolen "bait" car, brought to a stop by remote control, near Newcastle in March. Bait cars have hidden cameras and equipment that turns off the engine and locks the doors when commanded by police.

GREG GILBERT / THE SEATTLE TIMES
The car had been left unlocked with the keys on the passenger seat. The video normally would have been introduced at trial, but the suspect's guilty plea Thursday made that unnecessary.

GREG GILBERT / THE SEATTLE TIMES
Police pursued him along Interstate 405 to the Newport Shores area, where, thwarted by a dead-end road, Collins turned around and tried to run down three motorcycle officers while they fired at the vehicle. Power to the car's engine was cut off remotely.
The grainy black-and-white video runs about 20 minutes, with no sound, but the images of a car theft in progress are unmistakable — from the thief's first smirk as he finds the ignition key on the car seat, to his frantic expressions during the police pursuit, to the sobbing conclusion as officers approach for an arrest.
Made by a camera hidden in the dashboard of a Honda Civic, the video shows the theft and capture of the driver, all caught up-close as part of a Bellevue Police Department "bait car" program.
The driver, Jason Scott Collins, 27, of Kent, pleaded guilty Thursday to charges of theft, assault and possession of stolen property.
The episode took place March 14, when the Honda was stolen at Bellevue Community College. It ended after a police pursuit along Interstate 405 to the Newport Shores area, where, thwarted by a dead-end road, Collins turned around and tried to run down three motorcycle officers while they fired at the vehicle.
The entire sequence is captured on video, starting with Collins getting into the unlocked car, where the keys were left on the passenger seat, and smirking as he tries to remove the stereo. He rummages through the car, starts the engine and drives onto Interstate 90, adjusting the rear-view mirror and smiling as he checks his appearance. Then he waves his fist in the air as he seems to congratulate himself on the successful theft.
Within minutes his demeanor changes as the video shows him turning the car around at the dead-end street after going from I-90 to I-405, realizing officers are following him. He ducks to the right and frantically reaches up to touch his head as a bullet comes through the rear window and grazes his head.
The final images show the car slowing, disabled by a Canadian monitoring company that cut off power to the engine, and Collins desperately shaking the steering wheel as if trying to make the car continue.
In the last frames, he has his hands on his head, unable to get out of the car because it has been locked by the monitoring company, and he is sobbing as officers come to remove him from the Honda.
Under normal circumstances, said Officer Greg Grannis, police public-information officer, the car would have been disabled when officers first had it in sight. But Collins drove onto the freeway, then got on the dead-end road, before officers were close enough to order the car disabled.
Bait cars are set up to trap car thieves, and they are equipped with hidden cameras, tracking systems and equipment that turns off the engine and locks the doors when commanded by police.
The video normally would have been introduced at trial, but the guilty plea made it unnecessary to produce the video in court.
Instead, police showed the video Friday as an example of how car thieves can be captured and what can happen when they're caught.
"That's why we do this," said Grannis, explaining that the bait-car program serves as a kind of "boogey man" to deter car thieves.
"They should know that any car they steal could be a bait car," he said.
Collins is to be sentenced Nov. 2 and faces up to seven years in prison.
Peyton Whitely: 206-464-2259 or pwhitely@seattletimes.com
Copyright © 2007 The Seattle Times Company
![]()

- Chinatown ID restaurateurs say longer parking hours cut business
- A look at possible Mariners lineup | Mariners Blog
- Dustin Ackley on Taijuan Walker after facing him in BP: "He's close to ready" | The Hot Stone League
- Ichiro's style change is bigger news than his lineup change | Larry Stone
- McGinn addresses murder 'emergency' in annual speech
- Chone Figgins taking all the heat off of Ichiro as Mariners go in bold new direction | Mariners Blog
- Students return to Bremerton school where girl was shot
- Italy: Divers find 8 more bodies in ship wreckage
- Injured Seattle firefighter's award of $12.75 million upheld by court
- Landscape beneath former Lake Aldwell revealed | Field Notes
- Judge: State can't make druggists sell Plan B contraceptive
605 - Chinatown ID restaurateurs say longer parking hours cut business
335 - The overdue split among Democrats on education reform
242 - Speculators blamed for rising oil, gas prices
174 - Chone Figgins taking all the heat off of Ichiro as Mariners go in bold new direction
134 - AP source: Obama seeks 28 percent corp. tax rate
132 - Seattle's hopes of luring NBA's Kings here takes a hit
128 - Christie to Buffett: 'Write a check and shut up'
72 - Brendan Ryan and Munenori Kawasaki having fun and working hard at Mariners camp
60 - Snohomish County Council wants Reardon on leave
60
- Elks lodges are hot again in Seattle
- Spaghetti squash can be a side or main dish
- You can't beat the views from a lighthouse-keeper's cottage
- Girl, 8, shot by accident in Bremerton school
- Ichiro's style change is bigger news than his lineup change | Larry Stone
- Chasing the elusive Pliny the Younger
- Speculators blamed for rising oil, gas prices
- Seattle full-day kindergarten fees to increase 15%
- State trooper shot and killed in traffic stop
- The overdue split among Democrats on education reform | Lynne Varner / Times editorial columnist





