I've been watching the theft situation closely and here are some suggestions for your consideration.
- De-badge your Kia so the thieves don't recognize the emblem and break into your car. Kias with the new style emblems are glued on with no prongs or holes in the bodywork. If you can't do this yourself a good body shop can in half an hour to an hour -- about $70.
- The steering wheel Club can be defeated by a thief with a hacksaw. However, the presence of the Club may deter the thief from breaking the glass in the first place because you've presented them an additional obstacle. Also, most of these thieves don't carry a hacksaw.
- Kia is providing free steering wheel Clubs through police departments in hard hit cities. Check with your local PD, sheriff office and dealer. Don't hold your breath on this as Kia, according to news reports, is only giving away a hundred or so per city. This is going to bite Kia hard in the penalty phase of any class action lawsuit. Keep a record that you tried to get a Club.
- The Kia-Hyundai anti-theft kit is a motion detector that will sound an audible alarm (hopefully) when glass is broken. Unfortunately, the cost for the device itself is $170 and up with a two hour installation that makes the total bill from $500-$700. You may be able to recoup some of this through lower insurance premiums. The alarm won't prevent your side or rear window from being broken, but it can maybe prevent your ignition from being destroyed and the car from being boosted. There are other aftermarket alarms that may cost less.
- Consider installing a defeat (kill) switch. You'll still have your glass broken and your ignition destroyed (about $10,000 to repair) but the car will probably stay in place. Back in the old days when car radios were frequently stolen, people would put a sign on their car saying 'No Radio'. I don't know if a sign saying 'Kill Switch Installed' will help. These thieves probably can't read.
- If your car has been stolen you can get involved in one of 19 class actions suits against Hyundai-Kia. Undoubtedly, these will be consolidated into one class action suit. Best bet to be the lead attorneys is the MLG group in Los Angeles. Right now they are sueing for actual theft damages, but other suits are seeking recompense for diminished trade-in value and increased insurance rates. If this class action lawsuit goes as the successful Theta II engine action, once you are listed with one law firm you will automatically go into the consolidation pool. Keep your receipts, police reports, and logs of lost wages and costs associated with the theft. Chances are any settlement will be a one-size-fits-all blanket settlement for all theft victims, but the U.S. legal system is screwy and the court may want actual damage receipts. Word in the legal profession is that the Kia theft situation may be one of the largest in U.S. history (7,000 Kias have been stolen in Chicago alone up to Nov. 1).
- Keep in touch with your insurance company. In hard hit cities insurance companies are denying comprehensive insurance to Kia owners. If you have a lien you are required to have this. My insurance company, State Farm, raised my rates 50 percent, but at least they kept me. I'm moving back to Kansas City and if my rates go up there the Kia will be traded for a Civic.
- Go online and review all of the suggestions to deter theft. Park in a garage if you have one.
- Kia and Hyundai are unofficially distributing rumors they are developing a 'software fix' to stem thefts. In my opinion they are recycling the PR strategy they pulled in their Theta II debacle. No software fix helped those engines from disintegrating. Still, keep in touch with your dealer because, who knows, something may be developed
Good luck.