The Wire Rundown: Corvette Heist, Honda Recall, and Porsche Kills the Electric 911The Auto Wire's morning roundup of the stories actually worth your time — recapped fast, with links to the full reports when you want to go deeper. Here's your bulletin for Tuesday, June 16, 2026.A pair of thieves walked onto a Michigan Chevy lot and drove off in two C7 Corvettes while the dealership cameras rolled — moving straight for the cars like they already knew which ones they wanted. [Inside the Brazen Corvette Heist Caught on Camera]Honda is recalling roughly 880,000 vehicles over a rear suspension defect that, in the worst case, could separate from the body while driving. [880,000 Hondas Recalled Over Rust Risk]AdvertisementAdvertisementPorsche's CEO has officially killed the electric 911, confirming there's no battery-powered version in the works and no plans for one anytime soon. [Porsche's CEO Just Killed The Electric 911]Chinese-backed marque Kosmera revealed its Star Razer, an electric grand tourer chasing a wild 3,112 hp and a claimed 342-mph top speed. [Kosmera Star Razer Hypercar]Bugatti built a hypercar that doesn't move — the BUGATTI N1, an absurdly lavish folding MicroLED television made with display specialists C SEED. [Bugatti's Newest Creation Is a Giant Folding TV]An organized crew hit the 2026 Hot Rod Power Tour kickoff, slipping into a Joliet, Illinois hotel lot overnight and rolling off with two Corvettes and a Camaro. [Thieves Hit the Hot Rod Power Tour]AdvertisementAdvertisementThe viral white Mustang "cop escape" debate is missing the point — the real story is what Florida's fleeing-and-eluding law actually says about that 19-year-old's case. [Everyone's Missing the One Thing That Matters]A Milwaukee officer resigned after using license-plate-reader tech to track a woman he was dating nearly 180 times in two months — exposing a much bigger vehicle-surveillance problem. [A Cop Scanned Her Plate 179 Times]Months after a federal audit flagged North Carolina's commercial-license process, the real question is whether the state actually fixed the underlying system. [Did North Carolina Fix Its Trucker License Problem?]The sub-$25K new car is basically extinct — here's a breakdown of exactly what killed the affordable new car. [What Killed the Cheap New Car]Worth bookmarking from the garage deskThere's a Best Time of Year to Buy a New CarThe Car Maintenance Schedule Your Mechanic Wishes You'd FollowYou're Almost Certainly Not Rotating Your Tires EnoughGot a tip or feedback for The Wire Rundown? Drop us a line.Join our Newsletter, follow our Instagram page, and connect with us on Facebook.