🚨 New Story: Two burglary-to-vehicle calls were logged near the Magic Kingdom / Contemporary Resort area on consecutive evenings. 🔒 Lock your vehicle and remove valuables from view.
Two burglary-to-vehicle calls were logged by the Orange County Sheriff’s Office on consecutive evenings near the Magic Kingdom and Disney’s Contemporary Resort area, according to public call-log records reviewed by WDW Active Crime.
The first call was listed on Thursday, June 25, 2026, at approximately 6:21 p.m. A second burglary-to-vehicle call was listed the following evening, Friday, June 26, 2026, at approximately 6:32 p.m.
Both calls appeared in the same general Walt Disney World area near the Magic Kingdom / Contemporary Resort corridor. The timing is notable because the calls were logged almost exactly 24 hours apart.
At this stage, WDW Active Crime has only reviewed the public call-log entries. The available records do not yet show whether the incidents are connected, whether property was stolen, whether any vehicles were damaged, or whether a suspect has been identified.
Two similar calls in the same general area on consecutive evenings may indicate a localized pattern, but the call log alone cannot confirm whether additional vehicles were involved or whether the incidents are connected. In parking-lot related theft cases, initial reports can sometimes represent only part of what occurred, especially if additional victims discover missing property later or report first to on-site security.
WDW Active Crime is awaiting official records before drawing conclusions about the scope of the incidents.
Not the First Vehicle-Related Theft Concern at Disney
Vehicle burglary incidents have been reported on Walt Disney World property before.
In February 2024, local media reported that a man was arrested after Disney security allegedly saw him enter or attempt to enter multiple vehicles in the EPCOT parking lot. According to the report, the incident happened in the Wall-E parking section, and the suspect was charged with attempted burglary.
In a separate 2023 case, a man was accused of taking car keys from an unattended stroller inside EPCOT, locating the victim’s vehicle in the EPCOT parking lot, moving the vehicle, and rummaging through it. That case involved charges including grand theft of a motor vehicle and burglary to a conveyance.
More recently, in 2025, a third-party valet worker at Disney’s Animal Kingdom Lodge, Kidani Village, was accused of stealing a guest’s checkbook from a vehicle and cashing nearly $1,300 in fraudulent checks.
Those prior cases do not prove the two June 2026 Magic Kingdom-area calls are related to each other or to any previous incident. They do, however, show why repeated burglary-to-vehicle calls on Walt Disney World property are worth tracking through official records.
What the Call Log Does, and Does Not, Tell Us
A burglary-to-vehicle call can involve several different circumstances, including an unlocked vehicle, forced entry, missing property, attempted entry, or a report that is later determined to be unfounded.
The call log confirms that law enforcement responses were recorded. It does not provide the full incident narrative, victim statements, suspect information, surveillance details, property-loss information, or final case disposition.
That distinction matters. Public call logs are useful for identifying activity and patterns, but they are not a substitute for full incident reports.
WDW Active Crime will be requesting additional records related to both calls and will update this article if more information becomes available.
For guests, cast members, and visitors parking in resort or theme park areas, the basic reminder remains the same: lock your vehicle, remove valuables from view, avoid leaving bags, wallets, electronics, or keys inside, and report suspicious activity to law enforcement or Disney security.