The scourge of stolen bikes in Britain
An experiment in Liverpool shows how the police can tackle bike theft
ON A SUMMER’S day in Southport, in north-west England, the Merseyside police were on the hunt for stolen bikes. Their suspicions were raised by a “well-known male”, recently out of prison, on a notably pricey bicycle. Officers stopped him, entered the bike’s details into a database and rang the owner, who had been under the impression his bike was locked up outside his workplace. It had been recovered before he’d realised it had gone.
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This article appeared in the Britain section of the print edition under the headline “The wheels of justice”
Britain October 5th 2024
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- Why on earth would anyone go to a British party conference?
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- Gigafactories and dashed dreams: the parable of Blyth
- The scourge of stolen bikes in Britain
- Britain’s last coal-fired power station closes
- How British-Nigerians quietly made their way to the top
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