• Spike in violent robberies in London

    From Spike@21:1/5 to All on Sun May 5 15:30:54 2024
    Spike in violent robberies leaves London cyclists fearful

    Published 19 November 2023

    Almost 90% of cyclists surveyed in London feel less safe after a spate of
    bike robberies in the past two months, according to data given to the BBC.

    The Regents Park Cyclists figures reveal the scope of the issue within
    cycling communities.

    Of the 1,300 cyclists surveyed, 96% had heard of at least one violent
    robbery, with 68% having changed their route and just over half cycling
    less.
    The Met said it understood robberies were a growing concern for Londoners.

    The London Cycling campaign said it wanted the Met Police to intervene in hotspots in the wake of the spike in violent bicycle robberies.

    Julian O'Neil is a cyclist who has experienced a violent robbery. He was attacked by three men who stole his bicycle in December 2021, and says he
    was so shaken that he does not cycle any more.

    "One of the men punched me, one sprayed bleach in my eyes and the third
    stole my Brompton," Mr O'Neil told the BBC.

    "I ran to the nearest cafe shouting, and immediately began rinsing my eyes
    out with water as they called the ambulance and police."

    Although police caught his attackers, who went on to be convicted, he was
    so shaken that he chooses not to cycle any more.

    'No-one stopped'

    In March this year, Mrs O'Neil was attacked on her way to Highbury and Islington.

    Two men in balaclavas and hoodies kicked her off her bike, broke her elbow
    and injured her shoulder.

    "No-one stopped to help when they attacked," she said. "I lost
    consciousness briefly when they kicked me off but luckily they did not get
    my bike."

    Mr O'Neil said the situation had become worse since the pandemic and
    questioned whether it was because of "inaction from the Met".

    Jen George is another victim.

    In 2022, she was pursued twice by men on mopeds, months apart, which left
    her with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), according to her
    psychiatrist.
    On the first occasion she immediately felt something was wrong, she said.

    "Before the attack I never felt threatened before. I trained 20-30 hours a week, but when the motorbike pulled up beside me I immediately felt threatened," Ms George said.

    The cycling trainer said she still struggled with the effects of both
    attacks.

    "My identity is cycling, my job is cycling and it has been robbed from me,"
    she said.

    'Doing all that we can'

    A spokesperson for the Met Police said the majority of London's 1.2m yearly bike journeys passed without incident.

    "We're doing all that we can to prevent robberies and thefts targeted at cyclists as we understand it is a growing concern for some Londoners.

    "Through our new cycle crime reduction partnership we are working to make
    it harder to sell stolen bikes through the second-hand market."

    The spokesperson said that officers focused on hotspot locations where
    "victims may be more at risk".

    Members of the public can record and register their bicycles on this online database.

    <https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-london-67452676>

    --
    Spike

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  • From Nick Finnigan@21:1/5 to Spike on Sun May 5 17:10:44 2024
    On 05/05/2024 16:30, Spike wrote:

    Spike in violent robberies leaves London cyclists fearful

    ^^^^^ ?

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  • From JNugent@21:1/5 to Spike on Tue May 7 12:24:39 2024
    On 05/05/2024 04:30 pm, Spike wrote:

    Spike in violent robberies leaves London cyclists fearful

    Published 19 November 2023

    Almost 90% of cyclists surveyed in London feel less safe after a spate of bike robberies in the past two months, according to data given to the BBC.

    The Regents Park Cyclists figures reveal the scope of the issue within cycling communities.

    Of the 1,300 cyclists surveyed, 96% had heard of at least one violent robbery, with 68% having changed their route and just over half cycling
    less.
    The Met said it understood robberies were a growing concern for Londoners.

    The London Cycling campaign said it wanted the Met Police to intervene in hotspots in the wake of the spike in violent bicycle robberies.

    <https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-london-67452676>

    Those quoted in these stories seem to ignore a couple of quite obvious
    and self-evident truths.

    Those committing these robberies of chav-cyclists and stealing their chav-cycles must fall into one of only two categories.

    First, they themselves are chav-cyclists who want the stolen chav-cycle
    for their own use.

    Secondly, and perhaps more likely given the alleged increasing number of
    these incidents, the robberies are carried out in order to acquire the chav-bikes for sale or (possibly more likely given the prices and identifiability of the chav-bikes involved) dismantling for parts. Those
    chains of possession would require a supply of chav-cyclists prepared to
    buy in a recognisably dodgy market (no questions about origin, no
    receipts, no after-sales), whether for complete chav-cycles or for their component "reclaimed" parts at lower then normal prices.

    No demand from such people, no thefts / robberies.

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