Idaho Woman Jailed on I-84 After Traffic Stop Reveals Stolen Honda
Pocatello woman Lisa Kim McNabb was jailed after troopers stopped her on I-84 at 7:18 a.m. and found she was driving a Honda stolen in Twin Falls.

A westbound traffic stop on I-84 at milepost 330 unraveled quickly at 7:18 a.m. on March 26 when the 2010 Honda CR-V a trooper pulled over turned out to be stolen from a Twin Falls, Idaho resident. The driver, Lisa Kim McNabb, 40, of Pocatello, was jailed on a possession-of-stolen-vehicle charge and later released pending further action.
The incident, documented in Baker County's public safety log for March 27, underscores how stolen vehicles move along the I-84 corridor before enforcement catches up with them. Twin Falls sits roughly 100 miles east of the Baker County line on the same highway, meaning the CR-V had traveled at least that distance across state lines before the stop near Baker City. The case now requires coordination between Oregon and Idaho authorities, since both the registered owner and the suspected driver originate from Idaho.
That kind of cross-border interagency communication is what makes corridor interceptions possible. When a vehicle is reported stolen in Twin Falls, that alert can reach Oregon State Police troopers working the Baker County stretch of I-84, which appears to be exactly what happened here. Whether the stop reflects isolated opportunistic theft or a wider pattern of vehicle movement along the corridor is part of what follow-up investigation will need to establish.

The March 27 log reflects the broader workload facing rural law enforcement in Baker County: non-injury collisions, welfare checks, medical assists, and traffic citations logged alongside criminal arrests. State police, Baker County Sheriff's deputies, and Baker City Police share coverage across the county's highways and municipal streets, and the daily public safety log is one of the clearest windows residents have into where those resources are being directed.
For anyone traveling or parking along the I-84 corridor, the McNabb stop is a concrete reminder that stolen vehicles from eastern Idaho regularly move westbound through Baker County. Using a steering wheel club, parking in well-lit and visible areas, and never leaving a vehicle running unattended are the most reliable deterrents against opportunistic theft. Suspicious activity near parked vehicles, or vehicles that appear abandoned along the corridor, can be reported to the Oregon State Police at 541-523-5326 or the Baker County Sheriff's Office at 541-523-6415.
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