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UPDATE 4/19/22 @ 7:30 p.m.
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (WSAZ) — Neighbors along one street in Huntington are wondering why six stolen cars were left on their block.
When Kristin Atwell first came outside Tuesday morning, she saw the six cars parked along Guyan Avenue near the Division Street intersection that weren’t there the night before.
“It definitely struck me as odd,” she said.
She realized some of the windows of the vehicles were shattered, and she called the police.
Marshall senior Elizabeth Fauber lives on the other side of the street and was also surprised to wake up and see the unfamiliar cars.
“Normally there aren’t hardly any cars parked at this end of the street,” she said.
Huntington police arrived and determined the six vehicles were stolen.
“I was just confused, like why this street?” Fauber said.
“I was really shocked,” Atwell said. “I can’t comprehend how six cars that were stolen get dumped in a random street corner in Huntington.”
Police say say all six of the cars were either Hyundais or Kias.
“It definitely makes me feel a little nervous that stolen cars are showing up, especially since I drive a Kia,” Atwell said. “Is my car easier to steal than others? Am I going to be next? It’s definitely scary.”
Investigators say they’re working to figure out how all six cars got to the same location.
Another Marshall student tells WSAZ her white Kia Optima was stolen from the Marshall football stadium parking lot overnight, and Huntington police told her that her car was not one of the vehicles they recovered on Guyan Avenue.
ORIGINAL STORY
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (WSAZ) – The Huntington Police Department located and processed six stolen vehicles Tuesday, all of them parked at the same location in the 2700 block of Guyan Avenue.
Officers say some of the owners have been notified. They say all six of the cars were either Hyundais or Kias. Police say a neighbor reported the cars had been vandalized. All had been stolen from different locations in the Huntington area, according to police.
Investigators say they’re working to figure out how all six cars got to the same location.
They say they found the cars after one of them was posted on Facebook upon being stolen. Anyone with information is asked to call 304-696-4420 or 304-696-4444.
This is a developing story.
Keep checking the WSAZ app for updates.
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