Porsche Theft Ring Goes for Volume, Not Vibes—and Ends in Prison

Porsche Theft Ring Goes for Volume, Not Vibes—and Ends in Prison

For ten months, a pair of thieves treated Greater Manchester like a self-serve Porsche dealership. No smashed windows, no high-speed chases, no social-media flexing—just quiet, methodical theft. And for a while, it worked. Twenty-five Porsches vanished between January and October, lifted cleanly and efficiently, as if summoned rather than stolen.

But the operation that probably felt airtight to its architects ended the same way most do: flashing blue lights, a courtroom, and years behind bars.

The men at the center of it all—Eidmantas Sadauskas and Vytautas Ceponis—weren’t joyriders or thrill-seekers chasing rear-engine glory. They were pragmatists. Using unspecified electronic equipment and basic hand tools, they allegedly defeated Porsche security systems, disabled alarms, and drove away without attracting attention. Once liberated, the cars were quickly re-registered with fresh plates, blending back into traffic like nothing had happened.

The numbers tell the story. Authorities say the 25 stolen vehicles had a combined value of roughly £1 million (about $1.35 million). That averages out to around $52,000 per car—hardly the stuff of GT3 RS fantasies. Translation: this wasn’t a 911-centric operation. As Road & Track noted, the more likely targets were Macans, Cayennes, and possibly a few entry-level Panameras. The bread-and-butter Porsches. Expensive enough to move for serious money, common enough not to draw heat.

It’s a reminder that modern car theft isn’t about drama—it’s about logistics. Steal what sells, steal it quietly, and move it fast. Police suspect the vehicles were destined for resale, potentially shipped abroad through illegal export channels. No burnout videos, no flexing on Instagram. Just volume.

Still, patterns attract attention. As the Porsche disappearances piled up, Greater Manchester Police began connecting dots. CCTV footage was combed through. Automatic number plate recognition data was cross-referenced. The kind of slow, unglamorous police work that eventually catches up with people who assume they’re smarter than the system.

That moment came at 1 a.m. on October 16, when the Tactical Vehicle Intercept Unit pulled over a suspect vehicle heading toward Cheshire. The car had already been linked to previous thefts, and inside were Sadauskas and Ceponis—along with a blank car key, screwdrivers, sockets, pliers, and other tools of the trade. Investigators also tied the pair to locations where thefts had occurred.

Game over.

Faced with overwhelming evidence and the prospect of a lengthy trial, both men pleaded guilty to conspiracy to steal motor vehicles at Minshull Street Crown Court on November 24. Sadauskas received a four-and-a-half-year sentence, while Ceponis was sentenced to four years in prison.

“This was a sophisticated criminal operation which saw multiple valuable cars stolen and sold on for gain,” said Chris Hopkins of Greater Manchester Police. “As soon as we identified the trend, we immediately began comprehensive work to identify all possible suspects and track them.”

Police have since recovered several of the stolen Porsches and continue efforts to locate the remaining cars. For owners, insurers, and law enforcement alike, it’s a small win in a larger battle—one that highlights just how vulnerable modern vehicles can be when convenience and connectivity collide with criminal ingenuity.

For Porsche drivers, the takeaway isn’t paranoia—but awareness. The same tech that lets you unlock your car with a button can be exploited by people who know what they’re doing. And while this particular ring is off the road for good, the market for stolen luxury crossovers isn’t going anywhere.

Fast cars are fun. But for thieves, it turns out the slow, boring ones pay just as well—until they don’t.

Source: Road & Track