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Harris County deputies find stolen $330,000 Ferrari at Houston home

Deputies found a stolen 2023 Ferrari Coupe worth about $330,000 at a home on Via Toscano Court, where the homeowner was detained and the case stayed open.

Marcus Williams··2 min read
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Harris County deputies find stolen $330,000 Ferrari at Houston home
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Precinct 4 deputies pulled a stolen 2023 Ferrari Coupe worth about $330,000 out of a Houston-area home in the 12100 block of Via Toscano Court, turning a routine property recovery into a cross-state investigation with an unusually expensive centerpiece.

Corporal Thomas with Constable Mark Herman’s Office said the Ferrari had been stolen out of Florida and was expected to be returned to its rightful owner in Aventura, Florida. The homeowner at the residence was detained while deputies worked to sort out how the car ended up there and who, if anyone, brought it to the house.

The recovery stands out because the vehicle was not a common pickup or commuter sedan, but a high-end Italian sports car that had quietly made its way into a suburban Harris County neighborhood. The investigation was still ongoing after deputies located the car, and authorities had not said whether the homeowner would face charges tied to the stolen vehicle.

The case also fits a broader pattern that has drawn the attention of Harris County Precinct 4. In a separate 2025 investigation, deputies recovered more than $100,000 worth of stolen luxury sports cars in northwest Harris County, showing that high-end auto theft has surfaced here before and can involve more than simple joyriding. Precinct 4 has also released local vehicle-theft data showing trucks and popular commuter cars are stolen most often, but the Ferrari recovery shows that organized theft activity can move far more valuable targets through the region as well.

For Harris County residents, the takeaway is less about the badge value of a Ferrari and more about how stolen vehicles can be hidden in plain sight inside ordinary neighborhoods. A rare sports car sitting at a residential address in northwest Harris County is the kind of recovery that suggests theft networks can cross state lines, use local homes as storage, and leave investigators to untangle who knew what and when.

This article was produced by Prism’s automated news system from verified source data, official records, and press releases, then run through automated quality and moderation checks before publishing. The system is built and supervised by the people who set the standards it runs under. Read our full AI policy.

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Harris County deputies find stolen $330,000 Ferrari at Houston home | Prism News