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-   -   Is bike theft still big business? (https://www.bikeforums.net/general-cycling-discussion/3479-bike-theft-still-big-business.html)

mike 09-20-01 11:22 AM

Is bike theft still big business?
 
Maybe I am naive, but does the bike theft/resale industry still exist in a significant way?

I remember back in the 1970's when bicycling was really big for young adults, bike theft was a huge problem. Professional bike thieves would cut locks, strip down bikes, mix the parts, repaint, and then sell the bikes.

My teen-age neighbor was just such a scoundrel and used his wicked business to fuel his drug consumption.

In those days, it was easy to find and buy hot bikes. Bikes and parts were even sold at flea markets in great numbers.

These days, though, bikes are so cheap and society is so affluent, it seems that bike theft "as and industry" would have a difficult time surviving. Who would buy a hot bike?

Naturally, bike theft has not diappeared, but it seems to be random, unorganized theft almost in the vein of vandalism rather than theft for resale.

What do you know/think?

riderx 09-20-01 11:48 AM

I believe so. Last year Bicycling magazine did an article/test on locks and how fast they could be broke. A related article had interviews with bike thieves. One guy offered a lifetime warrenty! Another carried a pager and took orders. See article here:
http://www.bicycling.com/magazine/bu...ks/index.shtml

Now, just think if these guys actually applied this to a legitimate business.

phoenyix 09-21-01 10:08 AM

Bicycle theft doesn't seam to be a big problem here. The Thefts where I am at seam to be more certered around, BMX, and the more higher priced Bicycles, and Non-registered, Bikes. My City has a Bicycle Registering program, while not perfect it appears to lower the theft rate a little, when used also with a Bike lock.

Brains 11-29-01 04:35 PM

Yes it is still big business, I have just had my two day old fully tricked up MTB/Tourer stolen, it had two locks, and not a trace was left behind - I then find 4 other bikes have been taken from that reck this year. It's a popular rack as it is in a private courtyard, with a Security guard on duty 10 feet away and lights and cameras. In London hundreds are stolen every week.

Joe Gardner 11-29-01 05:29 PM

Brains, welcome to the forums, im sorry to hear about your loss, i had one of my mtn bikes stolen from bike back porch, it too was locked up, with no trace of the theft. I hope you had some type of insurance that will cover this loss? Home owners luckly covered the replacement of my bike.

Ellie 11-30-01 02:50 AM

It's certainly big buisness in Cambridge and Oxford (UK). I had two bikes stolen in Cambridge, admittedly over a period of about 7 years. Cambridge Police have a special bit to go to to report stolen bikes. Both places have a large student population, who mostly get around by bike. Apparently theives often steal the bikes in one town, then drive them to the other to sell them.

When I reported my bike missing, the police said they had had a lot (which probably means 10+) go from that area in that week. Neither bike I had stolen was anything special. Except to me, of course. :(

Ellie

a2psyklnut 11-30-01 09:02 AM

I've been in this town for close to 20 years now. And about every 3 years we get a band of gypsies come through and cause havoc to retailers. They perform smash and grabs, go to department stores, walk in, grap an entire armful of mechandise and run out all in about 30 secs. Last time they came through about 10 bike shops in the area were hit from Friday night to Monday morning. Stole only high end mountain bikes and sunglass display cases. Gone by the time the cops arrived. One shop owner was so concerned, he slept in his shop for a week! The bummer of it all was that the amount stolen at each shop didn't meet the deductable and the owner's had to eat their loses!

John E 11-30-01 09:42 AM

A week ago, I would have responded that bike theft is not as significant as it was 30 years ago, although this is an admittedly biased comparision between a large urban college campus (UCLA) and a quiet beach town. However, last week, my son's 24"-wheeled mountain bike was stolen while he was shooting baskets at a local school playground. The thief left a new-looking Magna hybrid (overweight piece of merde from *-Mart) with a flat tyre and took off on William's Giant-built Peugeot "US Express." He dragged the Magna home, and I replaced the tyre, tube, and rim strip, and I told him to use it as a beater. Interestingly, he would rather walk than ride the thing, so he may have learned a valuable lesson. (It's also gratifying that a 12-year-old can distinguish so easily between an older mid-quality bike and a much newer, flashier-looking no-quality bike.) He is almost big enough to ride the Ross Rock Machine I fixed up for him, but I told him he will have to wait until he demonstrates that he can take security issues seriously.

D*Alex 11-30-01 10:24 AM

John-get the serial # off that Magna, and file a police report. Chances are pretty good that Wal-Mart can narrow down the thief to a list of maybe .5 dozen, then find the bike with minimal legwork. Every purchase at Wal-Mart is on file, and if the bike was bought with anything other than cash (quite likely), there is a trail.

aerobat 11-30-01 11:05 AM


Originally posted by D*Alex
John-get the serial # off that Magna, and file a police report. Chances are pretty good that Wal-Mart can narrow down the thief to a list of maybe .5 dozen, then find the bike with minimal legwork. Every purchase at Wal-Mart is on file, and if the bike was bought with anything other than cash (quite likely), there is a trail.
Unless it was stolen as well!

fubar5 11-30-01 11:19 AM

hey psyklnut....sheesh...Thats a scary story!! 10 shops!! If I owned a shop, I would have gotten a few of my riding buddies to stay there with me, and I would have brought in a few dogs and a shutgun filled with buckshot for each my buddies. Gee wiz, sunglasses racks are probably several thousand bucks right there!!! You figure each pair was 100 or so bucks, and there was at leat ten pairs in there, and they may have had more than one rack!!!...Wowzer!!!

D*Alex 11-30-01 11:43 AM

Well, if somebody was stoopid enuf to actually steal a Wal-Mart bike, that would make them pretty obvious. Stupidity that bad usually shows.

champion 11-30-01 03:08 PM

In London Ontario, street bike theft seems to be declining for the last few years, but my store still has chains over few expensive bikes even during operating hours, just my insurance did not like my privies claims....

Bikideshi 11-30-01 07:01 PM

Bike theft is sill a major problem. I had a jerk try and bang down my door with a rock for an hour or so. He was darn quick at running away. The cops won't stick their neck out for a bike. You get caught in this dichotomy in my town (ignorant central) where the middle class thinks bikes are heavy and you just can't drive and the the poor or addicted are killing you for lead tricycles in hopes of finding titanium skewers or something. The national Bike Registry says that there is a 50% chance that you will have your bike stolen if you are a college kid. They have the best statistics on bike theft and actually explain why it is such a problem. This being because of the drug trade trades with 3rd world countries which use bikes (eg. heroin and china). The problem is that bike theft has led to many financial problems and therefore I have been getting little sleep. this makes you seem incompetant which feeds the middle classes impression that you are just some bum or something. They even get more upity and self -righteous about killing you, since they figure that you must be scum to bike. The problem i have is that I crapped up my bike with stickers and paint and ditched wearing lycra to not scream "yuppie" from my appearance. there is such racial hostility here, that you get all kinds of dung just for riding. I think this town suffers from a all to heavy car dependence and false midwestern pride in "practicality." The truth is social programs are being cut to fund the wider roads urban sprawl mandates.
We ranked 4th in the country in urban sprawl. Trust me, I am moving out of this town if it is the last thing I do.
http://www.nationalbikeregistry.com

Brains 12-01-01 08:50 AM


Originally posted by Joe Gardner
Brains, welcome to the forums, im sorry to hear about your loss, i had one of my mtn bikes stolen from bike back porch, it too was locked up, with no trace of the theft. I hope you had some type of insurance that will cover this loss? Home owners luckly covered the replacement of my bike.
The house insurance will pay out, but only to the maximum allowed for a bike which is £500 (about US$750), unfortunatly by two day old reciept was for £1,003 (about US$1,500).

:(

LittleBigMan 12-01-01 09:25 PM


Originally posted by mike
In those days, it was easy to find and buy hot bikes. Bikes and parts were even sold at flea markets in great numbers.
Well, I don't actually know about bike theft.

But I have noticed that a good bike would cost twice as much if you bought the parts separately.

(Don't give a sucker an even break--park your bike inside. Out of sight, out of mind.)

scubagirl 12-03-01 12:27 PM

In Texas I sometimes see trucks with trailers heaped with bikes heading south towards Mexico. Bike registry won't help those.

John E 12-03-01 12:30 PM

Thanks for the cautionary post, Scubagirl, and welcome to the forum. I wonder whether we have a similar situation in San Diego.

By the way, bicycling is rapidly becoming the preferred way to cross the international border at San Ysidro / Tijuana. Do you see a similar trend anywhere in Texas?

Runge 12-03-01 04:25 PM

When I was at a moticycle shop they had this lock. It has a wire type lock. The lcok was about 2inches thick and woven with. The key part of it was the same locking device as what Volvo uses in their cars.

The problem was it was expenisve. 210.00CDN

Brains 12-03-01 06:02 PM

'THE' lock to get seems to be the the 'New York Krypotonite' locks - cost around £60-70 (=US$ 100) - They maybe be expensive (and very heavy at about 1.5kg (3lb), but that is a lot less than a new bike

Merriwether 05-20-02 11:02 PM

I knew someone who found a thief in the act. The thief was a pro, with tools and fake courier bag and shirt.

If you think that bike thief in the Bicycling article sounds cocky talking semi-coherently about the violence he inflicts on a lock, you should hear this guy talk about his treatment of this thief.

A satisfying story, to be sure. One you'd love to hear repeated more often.

Rotifer 05-21-02 09:49 AM

I have a funky theft story ....
Someone stole my friends Bontrager (rather uncommon bike). Well, about two weeks later I was on a morning ride and saw this dude ride by me on a Bontrager identical to my friends. Curious, and a little pumped ... I've had two bikes stolen and one stripped, I turned and followed him. We all know that modern, well maintained race bikes are very quiet and I managed to roll right up behind him at about 15 mph. When I was certain that it was my friends bike, I accelarated and grabbed him above the elbow. At that point we exchanged a few words and I had no idea what to do with the guy so I told him that if he got off the bike and scooted, I would forget he existed .. he like this idea. Strange but true, I swear. Needless to say, my friend is one of the luckiest bastards I know.

Richard D 05-21-02 10:11 AM

I liked this story:

http://www.bikemagic.com/news/articl...=&v=1&UAN=2640

Richard

Rotifer 05-21-02 10:14 AM

Great story ... may he rot in hell if it was stolen! :roflmao:

nathank 05-21-02 10:15 AM

hm... i guess i'm speculating a little here since i'm not really old enough to talk competently about theft in the 70's since i was born in 1970...

but i think bike theft is probably down from what it used to be say in the 70s b/c of rising costs of soceity and falling bicycle costs it's hard to make a living stealing bicycles these days --- as compared to say stealing and re-selling cars or computers where guys earn thousands, the blakc market for bicycles is just not so lucrative, with a typical profit probably only being $100 or so -- so most of the bike thefts are opportunity thefts at the school or playground or out of someone's open garage -- or maybe the poor guy needing money for a drug fix who can hawk a bike for maybe $50 at a pawn shop or whatever...

as i see it, bike theft is still really bad in places where bikes are common and demand is high so you can sell one easily ---- mostly college campusses... otherwise i think it is down.

i've heard that there are some 'professional' bike theives that can tell the difference in a $400 Hard Rock and a $3000 s-works and only steal the nice bikes... for example, i heard that at the huge MTB fest in Lake Garda Italy bike theft is really bad b/c criminal know that 5000+ bikers will be there with mostly high-dollar bikes...

Rotifer 05-21-02 10:26 AM

The last bike I had stolen (about 4 years ago), the cop told me that the pros travel all over Washington State stealing bikes then dump them in Seattle (this was in Walla Walla, about 300 miles from Seattle). He estimated they would be able to sell my Klein for between $40 and $100. It was locked securely to my car, no problem for those fellows.

adaze 05-21-02 10:40 AM

im lucky enough to not have had a bike stolen. though our house was broken into a couple of months age, we had all gone out for a curry, and came back and the had stolen a load of stuff includin my mates bike, luckily it was a cheapish dawes.

the closest ive come to having my bike stolen was last winter, i had gone swimming at the local pool, and when i had finished it was dark, tho i had parked and locked my bike in the bike stands next to the pool. my lock must have been strong enough coz when i had returned i saw they had tried to wrench the rear wheel out of the stand, having tried that they bent my rear wheel. i guessed htey realised they couldnt get it, so i thought they had left it at that, but no, just coz they couldnt steal it they then slashed my tyres :(

as a result i had to get a new back wheel built, and a new rear tyre (the wall had been slashed beyond repair :( )

but better than having to buy a whole new bike

orguasch 05-21-02 10:41 AM

Theft of any kind is still big bussiness, people steal your Identity, you have a thing and you leave it unattended, someone will try to get their hands on it , its as simple as that, I don't want to sound like a soothsayer, but eversince time inmemorial somebody will try to get things that doesn't belong to them, so Bike theft is still a big business everywhere

Dutchy 05-22-02 12:27 AM


You don't know where I come from. I know where you come from -- I know that you can afford one Colnago you can afford another. You might not be able to buy some more stocks this year is all. Or take your nice vacation to Utah. Or you might have to ask daddy for more money. Or order up with your shop-employee discount. Or gosh-golly you might have to replace your nice Record bike with Chorus and ain't that just the end of your world? See, I know you all.

You, on the other hand, don't know my situation. Who are you to judge?
http://www.bicycling.com/magazine/b...rks/index.shtml

This is a quote from a link posted at the begining of this thread.

This guy is complete wanker. He likes to stereotype cylists but doesn't like it when people stereotype thieves, a real class act.

I had a bike stolen ~7 years ago, it was my first serious MTB and I was in love with that bike. I even had some suspension forks on order for it. I had it set up perfectly, everything was colour coordinated from the anodised drink bottle cages to the anodised bar ends. It was only worth $700 new and was about 2 years old, but it was mine.

I hope the @$%#er that stole it got collected by a truck on his way to Cash Converters.:mad: :mad: :mad:

CHEERS.

Mark


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