Chad Swiatecki Trending Less than a minute into a recent from online creator Ibrahim “Beebo” Aburish (@beebotows) you get the feeling that he’s seen so many Toyota Camrys with missing wheels that he can put emergency replacement wheels on them through pure muscle memory alone. That’s because the vehicles are one of the top targets of wheel theft across the nation. Aburish, who is based in Maryland and services the Washington, D.

C. area, is out to multiple theft scenes per day. He helps get the cars in suitable driving condition again.

The clip has been viewed more than 1.1 million times. It begins with Aburish’s camera locked on a 2025 Camry SE.

It’s resting on yellow plastic crates instead of its wheels—they’ve been forcibly removed. “Another one,” Aburish laments as he zooms-in and shows that the car’s rocker panels have been collapsed. They’re now bearing the weight of the vehicle against the crates used by the wheel thieves to prop it up.

A close look at the empty wheel mount assembly shows the lugnuts strewn about the area. Aburish notes the thieves took off the dealer wheel lock “like it was nothing.” “Wheel lock useless,” the top comment on the post reads.

They are lug nuts that need to be removed with a key. As : “Without your wheel lock key, the tire, rim, and wheel cannot be easily removed. Wheel locks only protect against the theft of tires, wheels, and rims.

They do not protect against car theft. They are commonly confused with wh.