A Porsche Panamera Vanished After A Valet Gave The Keys To The Wrong Guy

A hotel valet in Houston handed the keys to a Panamera over to a complete stranger, and the car hasn't been seen since
A Porsche Panamera Vanished After A Valet Gave The Keys To The Wrong Guy

We’re sure there are plenty of good valet parkers out there. Valet parkers who are friendly, courteous and careful. However, unfortunately for the profession, the valet stories we’re most likely to hear involve joyrides and crashes, and the latest valet fail we bring you is the scariest of the lot.

It all started when Carlo DiMarco handed the keys to his Porsche Panamera over to valet staff at the Houston branch of DoubleTree by Hilton. When he went to retrieve the car a day later, it had gone, because staff had given the keys to a complete stranger, who clearly couldn’t say no to a free Porsche.

Over a year has passed, and the Porsche hasn’t been seen since. The hotel is still refusing to pay up, too. Hilton has passed the buck on to the valet provider, Enterprise Parking Services, Inc. DiMarco is suing the firm, which won’t pay either since its insurance policy doesn’t cover theft. Oops.

Speaking to NY Daily News, DiMarco reckons Hilton should cough up if the valet company continues to refuse a payout:

“You have a valet company operating your car and if they give your car to the wrong person they don’t have adequate coverage…The charge shows up on your bill when you check out, when you look at the telephone in the hotel room there is a valet button - this looks, feels and smells like a Hilton service regardless of whether it’s provided by a third party.”

His own insurance company valued the car at $68,000, well under the $125,000 he believes it was worth at the time. He said that he’ll continue to seek restitution through litigation rather than file a claim with his own insurance, something which seems likely to take some time.

Comments

Anonymous

I have a feeling that this is one of those stories that wont have an ending for at least a few decades. I know for a fact, if I owned something like that I’d have a tracker on it

08/09/2016 - 15:15 |
1 | 0
Akashneel

I hope they soon find the panamera. It hurts to learn about a car being taken away from it’s owner. I will never hand my car keys to a valet.😢

08/09/2016 - 16:41 |
5 | 0
Anonymous

Who wants to steal an ugly as sin Panamera????

08/09/2016 - 18:19 |
1 | 1
Anonymous

FREE ENGINE SWAP

08/09/2016 - 19:06 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

What if i told you it still exists

08/09/2016 - 19:15 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

well since the person that got his car had probably a parking ticket for his own car, why does the porsche’s owner didn’t take that car plate, get it to the police to know how’s the owner and then he would be able to retrace his porsche or atleast the person that took it. Unless the person took the porsche and his car

08/09/2016 - 22:49 |
1 | 0
Anonymous

Enter your comment…

08/10/2016 - 00:09 |
1 | 0
Anonymous

Similar thing happened to me at a hotel in Tempe, AZ. The valet brought out an SUV (can’t recall exactly which one… large Toyota, or Lexus). Anyway, I refused to take it, since I really preferred my Subaru BRZ. I actually had to rake through the drawer of car keys to point out the set belonging to my car! Potentially, I could have picked the keys to any car that I fancied.

08/10/2016 - 01:26 |
1 | 0
Anonymous

Sadly enough with the typical Porche design no police or nornal human can tell what it is from the front. The police will be getting alot of reports I guess. Thanks Porche. Note to self. If you wanna steal a car, steal any new Porche.

08/10/2016 - 03:40 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

*Porsche

01/22/2017 - 03:15 |
0 | 0
hotch370z (Z Guy)

The Porsche now belongs to mexico

08/10/2016 - 04:14 |
0 | 0

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