Title 18 › Part PART I— - CRIMES › Chapter CHAPTER 25— - COUNTERFEITING AND FORGERY › § 511
It is a crime to knowingly remove, erase, change, or otherwise tamper with a vehicle identification number on a motor vehicle or a motor vehicle part. It is also a crime to knowingly remove, erase, change, or cover a special anti-theft decal or device put on a vehicle under the Motor Vehicle Theft Prevention Act when you do it to help steal the vehicle. Covering the decal so you cannot see it counts as tampering. The rule does not apply to certain people unless they know the vehicle or part is stolen. Those people include scrap processors or demolishers who follow state law; repairers who must remove or alter a number to fix the vehicle; people who restore or replace ID numbers under state law; and the vehicle owner or someone the owner, state or local law, or the Attorney General’s rules authorizes to remove the decal. Definitions: “identification number” = number or symbol used for identification under chapter 301 and part C of subtitle VI of title 49; “motor vehicle” = as defined in section 32101 of title 49; “motor vehicle demolisher” = person who reduces vehicles or parts to unusable metallic scrap; “motor vehicle scrap processor” = business that buys vehicles or parts to turn into graded metallic scrap at a fixed location using machinery.
Full Legal Text
Crimes and Criminal Procedure — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
18 U.S.C. § 511
Title 18 — Crimes and Criminal Procedure
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73