Makes you wonder, if you sell the car and claim you didn't know are you still responsible? I don't think negligence is a defense.
http://www.hemmings.com/mus/stories/2006/07/01/hmn_feature16.html
Last year I was looking hard for a 70 Cuda and found one semi local here in CA. Went to look at it, black on black, 340 6-pack, beautiful car, everything on the fender tag matched what the car had, all VIN docs matched. BUT, he had the cowl plate in an envelope saying it was removed due to rust. He said the car came from out of state and the CHP did an inspection and verified the car. To the uninformed buyer like me everything looked legit and I was thinking of pulling the trigger, it was a beautiful car. He even had a bill of sale from a guy in WA for the "parts car" having that VIN and supposedly that was the car that was restored by the guy in WA.
I posted pics here and low and behold, Barry spotted a fraud. The BS VIN pieces had been listed for sale in Alabama or somewhere stating the rusted out CUDA was parted out and just the VIN parts were what was left. Fender tag, cowl plate, VIN plate, radiator support, all the ID pieces. The ebay ad showed the auction ended with no buyers.
Well, turns out the guy in WA bought the VIN parts ( he still claims he bought the entire parts car) and built the black on black CUDA exactly to specs from the fender tag. It really was a gorgeous car. When questioned, they guy in WA got pissed off and said he had two old cars headed for the junk yard and he made one beautiful car out of them, and it was no ones business but his. He had since traded the CUDA for a roadster and cash from a guy here is CA who sold it to his friend.
Long story short, looked like CUDA VIN parts were used to make a Barracuda into a beautiful CUDA. If someone didn't catch the ebay ad and show it as flagged in the registry, the car would have passed from person to person probably without question since it appeared everything matched and had a clean title. I called the CHP to see if there issues and they said they did inspect the car and were still investigating it, but since it was a $50k show car rather than a 96 Honda they didnt want to seize it (yet). They did say it was possible they were still going to grab it and start scraping paint. Last I heard the guy that had it was going to try to sell it at the BJ auction in Vegas last year but never did.
I ended up buying a beautiful 70 Cuda resto-mod 440 with no VIN issues although there's another story about it I'll post separate....
Bottom line is some fraud could pass if done right but thanks to the watchful eyes of some of you here I dodged a nightmare and possibly a seized car.