A man used Google Earth to track down his £23,000 car which was stolen from his home. 

Jayy Robinson, 23, woke up to find thieves had broken into his house and had taken the keys to his Seat and a Volkswagen Golf.

The engineer posted shared details on the theft on social media after being left "unimpressed" with the actions of police.

Jayy said: "I was due to go to work at 6 am, went downstairs and both cars were gone, I was devastated".

Leigh Journal: Jamie began messaging the thief on Snapchat who was demanding £2,000 to return the vehicle and gained their trust by being friendly to them. (Jayy Robinson/ SWNS)Jamie began messaging the thief on Snapchat who was demanding £2,000 to return the vehicle and gained their trust by being friendly to them. (Jayy Robinson/ SWNS) (Image: Jayy Robinson/ SWNS)

'Devastated' man uses Google Earth and Snapchat to track down stolen car

Following the post, one of Jayy's friend - 22-year-old Jamie saw a person trying to sell the Seat on a Snapchat story.

The story featured a blurry video of the car parked up.

Jamie began messaging the thief on Snapchat who was demanding £2,000 to return the vehicle and "gained their trust by being friendly to them."

All the while, Jamie helped Jayy do a reverse image search of the building the car was parked next to.

The pair managed to triangulate the location after spotting the name of a housing estate on a wheelie bin.

After that, they used Google Earth to identify the exact street where the vehicle was parked before calling police.

Leigh Journal: The pair managed to triangulate the location after spotting the name of a housing estate on a wheelie bin. ( Jay Robinson/ SWNS)The pair managed to triangulate the location after spotting the name of a housing estate on a wheelie bin. ( Jay Robinson/ SWNS) (Image: Jayy Robinson / SWNS)

After notifying police, Jayy was then able to recover the Seat which was found "parked up with no one around" in West Bromwich, just six miles away from his home in Birmingham.

Jay said: “I didn't know what to say when I saw it, I was amazed, I tried my keys and the car unlocked straight away so I knew it was mine.

“I didn't think they would be that stupid to leave the car in the same spot I at least thought it would be in a different place.”

However, Jayy has stated that he was less than impressed with West Midlands Police.

He said: "I called them on Saturday afternoon for an update but they told me it hadn’t even been allocated yet.

"I then called them on Sunday and they said it was still pending allocation, I wouldn't have got the Seat back if I hadn't taken matters into my own hands."

Jayy's Volkswagen Golf, worth £16,000, has still yet to be found.

West Midlands Police said: "We received a call just after 6.30am on Friday (27 Oct) that two vehicles had been stolen overnight from Poole House Road, Great Barr. One of the vehicles has been recovered.

"Anyone with any information is asked to contact us via LiveChat on our website or call 101 quoting 20/936025/23."