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Shocking footage shows violent bikejacker swinging hammer at cyclist before stealing bike in latest Regent’s Park attack

“To me it seems like it can’t be that many people doing it – pulling out a hammer to rob a bike is not opportunistic, it’s people who know what they are looking for”

Horrifying footage has emerged of the moment a cyclist was attacked and robbed of his bike by hammer-wielding moped-riding thieves, as part of the latest string of violent bikejackings to hit Regent’s Park in recent weeks – a renewed wave of criminality which has prompted the Met Police to assure cyclists who use the park that it will “direct uniform and plain clothes patrols to target criminals at peak offending times”.

Earlier this week, we reported that London cyclists who use Regent Park’s quiet roads for early morning training say they feel like “sitting ducks” after a spate of terrifying targeted attacks on people on bikes in January, which saw robbers using sharp objects to puncture tyres, threatening victims with hammers, and forcing riders off their bikes.

One of those cyclists who fell victim to this renewed bikejacking scourge in the north-west London park – which, along with its surrounding roads, has been the scene of numerous bike robberies in recent years – was Patrick Conneely, who had his £4,200 Trek Domane stolen by two thieves on a moped during an early morning ride on the Outer Circle road on Saturday 18 January.

Conneely, from Leyton, east London, was riding alone after arriving at the park early to meet two friends at around 8am, later than the typical pre-dawn raids favoured by most thieves in the area, when the moped gang struck.

Footage of the incident, obtained by the Daily Mail from the Metropolitan Police, shows the two thieves – who had previously appeared alongside the 33-year-old cyclist to inspect his bike – stopping at the side of the road, as Conneely leaps off his bike before standing in front of it on the pavement.

After an initial confrontation, one of the thieves – who shouted at Conneely to “give me the f***ing bike” – retrieved a hammer from the back of the moped and grabbed the cyclist’s Trek, before swinging the hammer towards the rider.

As the two thieves escaped on the moped with the bike, Conneely can be seen attempting to shove them, while an onlooker phoned the police.

Cyclist attacked by hammer-wielding bikejackers in Regent's Park, LondonCyclist attacked by hammer-wielding bikejackers in Regent's Park, London (credit: Metropolitan Police)

“They pulled up next to me and looked at the bike. I knew straight away what was happening and felt very vulnerable so went to turn around, but they then went into a side road and turned around too,” the data analyst told the Mail about the incident.

“The one thing I really didn’t want to happen was to get smashed off the bike because you can really hurt yourself. So, I wanted to be off it and be standing up when they came.

“When that video starts you can see me jump off the bike. They then pulled up next to me and one of the men was telling me to ‘give me the f***ing bike’.

“He then reached for his waist before returning to the moped and taking a hammer out of the box, which he raised above his head to swing at me.

“Someone called the police and they were there in about five minutes. They said it was the third or fourth call that morning. Cyclists are really scared.”

Cyclist attacked by hammer-wielding bikejackers in Regent's Park, LondonCyclist attacked by hammer-wielding bikejackers in Regent's Park, London (credit: Metropolitan Police)

> "They told me to 'get off the f***ing bike' and pulled out a hammer": Cyclists demand urgent police action after latest violent bikejackings at Regent's Park

Conneely, who was previously a regular on Regent’s Park’s roads, cycling in the area several times a week, said he has not been back since the terrifying robbery.

“I’m reticent about going back,” he said. “This is a place we go to exercise and it’s right in the centre of London – we should be able to enjoy it safely.

“A lot of people I know are now meeting outside the park to group up before heading in.

“To me it seems like it can’t be that many people doing it – pulling out a hammer to rob a bike is not opportunistic, it’s people who know what they are looking for.

“A sting by the police – like the one they did on watch robbers in the West End – would be the obvious next step.”

As we reported this week, just days before Conneely’s ordeal, Bethan Lloyd-Glass was the victim of a similar attack, as her Trek Émonda was stolen by moped muggers who shouted “give me your f***ing bike” and pushed her to the ground.

“I was on my way to the park when two men drove past me,” she recalled of the robbery, which took place at around 5.45am on 14 January.

“I thought it was quite unusual to see pillion riders at that time of the morning. We stopped at a red light and the passenger got off the bike, said to me, ‘Give me your f***ing bike’, then pushed me to the floor. Then he swung the bike on his shoulder, got back on the motorbike and drove off.”

Regent's Park cyclistsRegent's Park cyclists (credit: Rory McCarron)

> "Steal away": Violent bikejackings targeting cyclists "are doing society a favour", writes journalist in column claiming latest hammer attacks in Regent's Park are "excellent"

Following this spate of attacks – and concerns raised by cyclists about police inaction – one club who uses the park contacted the Regent’s Park safer neighbourhood policing team to ask whether a car could patrol the area between 5.30am and 7am.

Adding to riders’ disappointment in the police response, they received the reply: “We understand your concern and frustration. Unfortunately, we are unable to change our working hours.”

However, the Met Police later assured road.cc that it is able to “direct uniform and plain clothes patrols to target criminals at peak offending times”, as a spokesperson insisted that the comment from the safer neighbourhood policing team did not paint the full picture.

The Met spokesperson added: “We know bike thefts are a significant concern, and we are mindful of the impact they have. Officers from the Regent’s Park Ward Safer Neighbourhood Team have been working with Westminster Council to tackle this issue, including patrolling hotspot locations in and around the park.

“In particular since January, we have stood up additional plain clothes and uniform officers, especially at night and before the park officially opens in the early hours of the morning. This is a key priority for the team, and given the violence used in these attacks, we will continue to ensure that we do all we can to put a stop to these crimes.

“Officers also engage with groups that use the park, and PCSOs from the team join rides run by local female cycling clubs. Making it harder to sell on stolen bikes through the second-hand market is also crucial, and we would encourage riders to register their bike with us for free so we can track them if they are stolen.”

Regent's Park Outer CircleRegent's Park Outer Circle (credit: StreetView)

> New figures reveal two bikejackings a day now taking place in London

Meanwhile, the chairman of Regent’s Park Cyclists, Sean Epstein, said he initially had “sympathy” for the police investigating the bikejackings, which have since become a depressingly common occurrence in the park.

“The first few times it happened because the robbers wore balaclavas, they had no number plates, there were no leads,” he said.

“But it keeps happening and there’s no plan to do anything about it.”

The high-value nature of bikes has made them a concerningly common target for criminals in recent years. We’ve reported on numerous incidents involving professional riders, club riders and businesses being targeted in increasingly organised break-ins, as well as these frightening bikejacking incidents where riders have been robbed of their bikes during training rides.

In 2022, pro cyclist Jennifer George said she no longer rides alone after two bikejacking attempts as she rode out to Surrey from her home in south-east London. Likewise, former Alpecin-Fenix pro Alexandar Richardson was threatened with a machete and dragged for 100 metres by moped-riding muggers in London’s Richmond Park, a teenager later sentenced to 12 months for the attack.

Other incidents involving club riders have been reported across London, notably near Regent's Park, and across the United Kingdom, high-value bikes seemingly now an attractive target for criminals, something Cycling UK has speculated may be because of the perceived low probability of being caught by the police.

Cyclists and police near Regent's ParkCyclists and police near Regent's Park (credit: @rpcyclists on Instagram)

> Police force admits bike thefts "unlikely to ever be solved"

However, the violent nature of the incidents targeting riders near Regent’s Park has been particularly shocking, with victims threatened with knives and other weapons.

And as if to prove the point that these crimes are nothing new and have not been dealt with by the Metropolitan Police, it's now a year this week since Regent's Park Cyclists, supported by British Cycling, Rapha, and Brompton, called on the Met to station more officers at the London crime hotspot in a bid to stem the seemingly constant flow of bikejackings.

Last year, like Conneely, The Times compared the robberies to similar crimes committed by “Rolex ripper” gangs targeting high-value watches in London, and reported that bikejacking victims had been told by the police that they believed the robberies are being carried out by an Albanian gang that is shipping the bikes to Russia, where high-end bikes are difficult to obtain due to sanctions.

After obtaining a PhD, lecturing, and hosting a history podcast at Queen’s University Belfast, Ryan joined road.cc in December 2021 and since then has kept the site’s readers and listeners informed and enthralled (well at least occasionally) on news, the live blog, and the road.cc Podcast. After boarding a wrong bus at the world championships and ruining a good pair of jeans at the cyclocross, he now serves as road.cc’s senior news writer. Before his foray into cycling journalism, he wallowed in the equally pitiless world of academia, where he wrote a book about Victorian politics and droned on about cycling and bikes to classes of bored students (while taking every chance he could get to talk about cycling in print or on the radio). He can be found riding his bike very slowly around the narrow, scenic country lanes of Co. Down.

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25 comments

Avatar
cmedred | 1 hour ago
0 likes
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Rendel Harris | 3 hours ago
2 likes

I wonder if a rape alarm attached to the handlebars would help? Some of the modern ones are absolutely deafening and can be heard from hundreds of yards away, I would imagine quite a few of these scrotes would do a runner when they heard it.

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Zjtm231 | 5 hours ago
2 likes

He should have been happy to give them his bike - they obviously needed it more than him.

Law and order are far right fascist concepts anyway, we all know that.

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brooksby replied to Zjtm231 | 2 hours ago
1 like

How do you know that the bike thieves were left wing?  Could just as easily have been right wing, or anarchist.

 

But probably ticked 'i'm not interested, r u?' on the latest census.

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chrisonabike replied to brooksby | 1 hour ago
0 likes

Presumably they left a receipt, and maybe some tracts (these revolutionary types are always armed with propaganda)?

Pretty sure that law and order are concerns to all sides of the political continuum.  However people at different poles may have different ideas about what makes for "order".  Perhaps protective laws within our country shouldn't apply to those we don't consider "us"?  And plenty of countries are bullish about foreign laws not applying to our citizens when they're abroad.  After all we all know all foreign police and courts are corrupt / politically controlled...

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brooksby | 5 hours ago
10 likes

C'mon, Giles Coren: tell us again why the cyclist deserved that surprise

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GMBasix replied to brooksby | 3 hours ago
0 likes
brooksby wrote:

C'mon, Giles Coren: tell us again why the cyclist deserved that surprise

We might as well ask a mosquito why that child deserved malaria; expect a very similar response.

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Zaichik | 5 hours ago
0 likes

I usually carry a can of bear spray which I picked up on a trip to the US. It fits easily in the back pocket of my jersey and would incapicatate anyone trying to take my bike

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brooksby replied to Zaichik | 5 hours ago
6 likes
Zaichik wrote:

I usually carry a can of bear spray which I picked up on a trip to the US. It fits easily in the back pocket of my jersey and would incapicatate anyone trying to take my bike

And is horrendously illegal in the UK…

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Zaichik replied to brooksby | 4 hours ago
1 like

as opposed to the violent theft of my bike? I will take my chances which would seem reasonable 

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ribena replied to Zaichik | 3 hours ago
2 likes

A can of spray paint might be a more legal deterrent...
https://road.cc/content/news/cyclist-fights-gang-who-threatened-him-hamm...

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GMBasix | 5 hours ago
10 likes

Unless you're training regularly in self defence, the chances are that the sudden appearance of two people wearing helmets on a bike (that is going to be faster than you can ever be and will go all the places you can ride), cornering you and threatening you with a hammer, is going to knock you off your game a little.

Take your lock out, watch how unwieldy it is compared with their hammer.

Pick up your bike and try to drive them away from you, and watch as one of them runs around the side of your bike while you think you're impaling the other on your chainring.

See how your nerves, that you presumed in your office chair would give you the edge in a scrap, suddenly turns your tired legs to jelly and slows down your tactical thinking so you make silly mistakes in front of two blokes who have grown up forcing their way on the streets.

Just give up the bike, keep your phone out of sight, and try to make getting away more important to them than teaching you a lesson.

If you get out of this with your Garmin intact, count yourself lucky - that data could have been lost.

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chrisonabike replied to GMBasix | 3 hours ago
1 like

Absolutely.  Probably very few people train in cycling shoes and while a bit knackered after a ride.  And while martial arts training can give you all kinds of benefits (including improving your response to stress and the unexpected), in real life they don't tend to call out "fight!" and then come at you one at a time.  Throw in "you don't know how many other people might be involved (possibly on motorbike / in car) or what they are carrying".  And the fact that blades and even blunt instruments reduce the margin between "injured" and "dead" significantly.

Choose wisely.

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GMBasix replied to chrisonabike | 2 hours ago
1 like

Plus, if you do manage to overcome them, I'm afraid you have to do a proper job - unless you include two pairs of quick cuffs in your saddle bag.

Once people are hit, they don't tend to stay down until you incapacitate them in such a way that doesn't require you to occupy yourself fully until the rozzers don't turn up... very difficult to do with two people.

So, how do you make sure two people don't get up? How confident are you that you can measure between the amounts of force needed to incapacitate somebody and to kill them? How confident are you to defend the difference between self defence and manslaughter in court?

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chrisonabike replied to GMBasix | 2 hours ago
2 likes

Nuke the entire site from orbit.  It's the only way to be sure.

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open_roads replied to GMBasix | 59 min ago
0 likes

Push them off the motorbike and hopefully they'll both have broken wrists from the fall. 
 

I would have thrown the bike up and over the hedge.

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stonojnr replied to open_roads | 11 sec ago
0 likes

shame the old fuel line valve isnt so accessible on modern bikes, I doubt theyd have any clue what youd done to their bike if you turned that.

in the movies of course the hero would just reach across and grab the assailants front brake lever, its the right hand side for reference.

but in real life when someones swinging a hammer at you, you tend to do what they say.

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Clem Fandango | 5 hours ago
4 likes

Given Royal Parks love of cyclists, can we be sure Loyd Grossman doesn't own a moped and/or a hammer?

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ROOTminus1 | 6 hours ago
3 likes

Every inch of my body wanted to fight back watching that video, but I know that would, in all likelihood, not end well.

It's sickening how powerless we are to defend ourselves in situations like that

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cyclisto replied to ROOTminus1 | 5 hours ago
1 like

A U-lock can literally work as a theft deterrent. 

And when carried in belt loop, it is easy to access.

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Hirsute replied to cyclisto | 5 hours ago
3 likes

But would casue you a lot of damage if you fell on it.

 

But yes, lock to the knee or swinging hiplock could work well. Very easy to say from a keyboard though.

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Rendel Harris replied to Hirsute | 3 hours ago
1 like
Hirsute wrote:

But would casue you a lot of damage if you fell on it.

Second that, it gives me the heebie-jeebies to see people riding around with their locks clipped to their belt loops, having known someone who fell from their motorcycle with a disc lock in their back pocket, came down on it and she had to have her spleen removed. Not a good idea.

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Hirsute replied to Rendel Harris | 3 hours ago
1 like

It was your good self that pointed it out to me over using a hip lock. Mine stays in the pannier now.

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HollisJ replied to cyclisto | 5 hours ago
5 likes

You could also use the bike itself, either to swing or defend - lots of exposed metal bits on a bike that would do some damage.

But, would you want to risk it? Sad as it is, just give them the bike, claim on your insurance and walk away in one piece.

Part of me wants to be the vigilante hero (I cycle along the infamous Bristol to Bath cycle path every week). A bigger part of me thinks about the family waiting for me at home...

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chrisonabike replied to cyclisto | 3 hours ago
0 likes
cyclisto wrote:

A U-lock can literally work as a theft deterrent. 

And when carried in belt loop, it is easy to access.

It might... or you might have just escalated a situation ("now we have to properly knack this tw** then take the bike and everything in their pockets").

You have to ask ... do you know who and what you're deterring?

As others have said - perhaps deterring a once-in-a-lifetime mugging might not be worth the much higher likelihood of doing yourself a nasty on the lock, and the guaranteed annoyance of same...

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