Anyone with a used phone to sell — their own or someone else's — can walk into a mall in the metro area and get cash for it from a machine, which alarms authorities confronting a rash of phone thefts downtown and near the University of Minnesota campus.
A convenience for the legions of adults who upgrade their phones each year, the ecoATM kiosks are just one of the latest places to sell a used phone, including Best Buy stores, online marketplaces such as Craigslist, eBay and Swappa.com, and numerous pawnshops and phone stores.
University Police Chief Greg Hestness warned a state Senate panel this week that the practice of stealing iPhones — known as "Apple picking" — has thieves coming to the U campus to find students to rob, often by flashing a gun.
"It's been a huge problem here on campus recently," said Mike Schmit, the student body president. "Just about everybody's got their smartphone, plus most of us have a laptop."
On Wednesday, an armed robber confronted a woman near 6th Street and 14th Avenue SE. at 9:20 a.m. as she walked to class, ripping away her backpack and taking her wallet, smartphone and iPad. It was the 29th reported robbery on or near the Minneapolis campus since Aug. 1.
Even an older model smartphone can be worth hundreds of dollars on the resale market, and they're everywhere: A majority of American adults now carry a smartphone, according to a Pew Research Center study released this summer.
With the average user holding on to their phone for less than two years before upgrading, a booming used-phone business worth billions of dollars in the United States alone has people such as Austin White-Pentony hoping to cash in.
TechBank: expanding
The owner of a mall kiosk that buys used phones, White-Pentony and two friends opened TechBank just a few months ago. Their only location, for now, is on the upper level of Rosedale Mall in Roseville, where they buy several used phones a day.