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"Theft has become legal": Police close stolen bike case a day after it was taken from outside Scotland Yard HQ, despite CCTV cameras and tracker showing location

Metropolitan Police backtracked and reopened the case after the story got widespread media coverage, prompting the victim to conclude: "It seems if you want to get a hold of your bike, it is best to call the national press"...

Imagine your stolen bike had a tracker that could inform the police of the exact location the thief had taken it to. Then imagine that said theft happened at a central London spot surrounded by CCTV cameras. Finally, to top it off, imagine your bike was stolen from a rack directly outside Scotland Yard, the headquarters of the Metropolitan Police. 

In this scenario you might feel fairly confident about the aforementioned police force being able to investigate the crime, perhaps even tracing where the stolen bike is and who took it? You probably would have also felt fairly confident it wouldn't be stolen from such a location in the first place.

Well, having been the victim of a bike theft in those exact circumstances and with the case subsequently closed by the Met one day later "without further evidence", anti-crime campaigner Dr Lawrence Newport was left to conclude that "theft has become legal in Britain".

Uploading a video to social media, Dr Newport explained how he locked a bike on a Westminster street outside Scotland Yard. When the bike was stolen he reported the crime and provided the police its location via the tracker, the bike also having been left in the proximity of three CCTV cameras.

A day later, he was told "without further evidence" the case would be closed.

"Is theft legal in Britain? We had our bike stolen right under the shadow of Scotland Yard and police did nothing about it," Dr Newport said in the video that has been viewed more than 1.6m times on Twitter/X since yesterday.

"With trackers installed and our bike locked under the view of Parliament, CCTV and the headquarters of British police, what more could we possibly have done? We called the police, told them where the bike was, and a day later they told us without further evidence they were closing the case. They hadn't checked the CCTV, they'd done nothing.

"Police can't act, stretched to breaking point, drowning in process and paperwork unable to recruit, theft has become legal in Britain. Meanwhile our politicians seem to have given up on police, on courts, on crime, and criminals know it."

At the end of the video he explains how, having taken his story to the Telegraph newspaper, the Met subsequently got back in touch to say they would review the CCTV and tracker evidence.

"It seems if you want to get a hold of your bike, it is best to call the national press," Dr Newport added.

He was promoting the Crush Crime petition, however the warning that bike theft has been effectively decriminalised is far from a new concern. In January, the Liberal Democrats made that same claim as it emerged that stats show 89 per cent of reported cases go unsolved.

> Three quarters of Brits don't expect police to bother investigating bike thefts

Bike theft has been in the news lately after two high-profile cases saw cyclists track down their own stolen bikes, the Guardian's former media editor Jim Waterson locating his family's stolen cargo bike via a discreet Apple AirTag.

"It immediately became apparent that the Met Police, weighed down on a Friday evening with a huge number of other calls, did not want to get involved," Waterson explained.

"If it's cycle theft you probably need to expect to solve your own crimes," he concluded, having undertaken a laborious five-hour task of tracking it down.

"In a parallel universe, I'm still waiting for the Met Police's follow-up call, and my bike is long gone in the back of that car, possibly to be sold on Facebook Marketplace or resprayed and sent abroad," he said. "The Met Police, short on resources, won't attend even if you know which block of flats contains your stolen bike.

"In the end I got incredibly lucky and got (most of) my bike back, by spending five hours staking out local streets and buildings. Others won't have as much luck."

That story came not long after another cyclist saw his stolen bike on Gumtree and made sure their case was "difficult to ignore" for the police, by tracking down the culprit within 48 hours and guiding officers right to his doorstep, leading to his arrest and a criminal charge.

Cyclists help police find stolen bike (Harry Gray)

A 21-year-old man has been arrested and charged with handling stolen goods after police accompanied the cyclist to the thief's flat to "keep the peace".

> Cycling UK hails "clever" policing after bait bicycle used to track down £130,000 bike theft gang in one shift

Last week, we reported that Cambridge topped the latest list of UK cycle theft hotspots, new crime data analysis revealed – as the city's large student population and cycling culture was blamed for "thriving" bike theft environment.

Dan is the road.cc news editor and joined in 2020 having previously written about nearly every other sport under the sun for the Express, and the weird and wonderful world of non-league football for The Non-League Paper. Dan has been at road.cc for four years and mainly writes news and tech articles as well as the occasional feature. He has hopefully kept you entertained on the live blog too.

Never fast enough to take things on the bike too seriously, when he's not working you'll find him exploring the south of England by two wheels at a leisurely weekend pace, or enjoying his favourite Scottish roads when visiting family. Sometimes he'll even load up the bags and ride up the whole way, he's a bit strange like that.

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6 comments

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Creakingcrank | 32 sec ago
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This story makes me a bit uncomfortable. Dr Newport is a professional campaigner who launched the "Crush Crime" campaign on 23rd November this year. A week later, he has achieved signficant media coverage about a bike theft from - of all places - outside Scotland Yard. He offers a picture of the bike locked up prior to the theft (an odd pic to take), in which the locking technique looks unconventional, to say the least.

Maybe we should thankful that somebody is using their media skills to draw attention to an important issue. I've had bikes stolen and I wouldn't wish that on anyone, but it seems he has gained more than he lost from this particular theft.

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mitsky | 4 hours ago
1 like

I can't remember if it was before or after the 2022 Highway Code update about mobile use, but I had a verbal conversation with a team leader at the Met police reporting unit that deals with road/driver incidents.

He basically told me that due to the increasing volume of reports they asked the CPS which cases are most likely to result in prosecution if the driver challenges the report and it goes to court.

Answer: mobile phone use. (Which makes me think it was after the tightening of rules.)

So since then the police have been disregarding any other reports with subjective evidence or offences that may be "minor" to concentrate on phone use as that had the highest success rate.

Which is presumably why they have de-criminalised a lot of offences which would have been actioned with NIPs/FPNs and subsequently why Cycling Mikey has apparently stopped bothering to report island hopping (keep left contraventions) and is concentrating on phone users.
Though even that has now been downgraded to "warning letters" in a lot of cases that would have been a slam dunk FPN 6 points £200 based on similar evidence provided in the past.

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brooksby replied to mitsky | 4 hours ago
1 like

Reading road crime stories on here and elsewhere, it certainly seems that the police only really follow up cases which they believe will be a definite 'slam/dunk' in court eg. the tendency to generally prosecute as 'careless' driving rather than as 'dangerous' driving.

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bobbinogs | 5 hours ago
3 likes

I think you'll find the police always investigate crime, such as close passes and theft...one just needs a police ID badge to trigger the process. Haven't got one? Tough shit, you're part of the problem.

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Rome73 | 7 hours ago
2 likes

I can tell you a dozen recent stories (and provide names, dates, locations) of friends and colleagues who have had a bike stolen, with a tracker and Police finding a reason to not follow up. One was told 'we don't do estates' when the bike was traced to a council estate. It's just endemic and, in London at least, it is taken for granted that the police will not follow up a bike theft. I don't think they have the resources to do it and neither the inclination and nor do they care; bike theft is an insurance issue and not a criminal issue. 

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Steve K | 7 hours ago
2 likes

Quite worrying personally as I often leave my bike on those racks when visiting Parliament - and have always assumed the proximity to both Parliament and New New Scotland Yard would mean it was relatively safe.

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