laura*
10-18-2009, 10:45 AM
(No, I'm not the victim.)
Yesterday (Saturday) I took public transit "downtown" for breakfast. The bus arrived at the main transit center at 10 AM. As I started my walk to the restaurant, I passed a mountain bike locked up at the transit center. It was smartly leaned against a bike rack with a U-lock locking the rear wheel and frame to the rack, and a fancy new looking chain lock locking the front wheel and frame to the rack. "Overkill" I thought, but the "two types of locks" method allowed them to lock the frame to the rack doubly.
After consuming my breakfast and three newspapers, I walked past the transit center at Noon. Passing the bike racks I see a bike leaning over crazily. At first it looks like the owner had removed the front wheel and locked it along side the rear. "But wait! That's the same bike from earlier." Except it was now missing the suspension fork, stem, handlebars, brake levers, disc brake calipers, and brake cables.
So, in those two hours, a thief had removed the grips, loosened and slid off the shifter pods, unbolted the headset adjuster cap, loosened the stem, unbolted the rear caliper, freed the rear brake cable, released the front wheel, slid out the fork, and walked away with the parts. All that along a street with continuous pedestrian traffic, with buses entering or leaving the transit center every few minutes, and maybe a transit rent-a-cop yelling at cyclists to "Walk your bike". :eek: :eek: :eek:
Walking by again at 5 PM, I looked close enough to see that the bike was a vivid blue Kona Cinder Cone.
As my bus home departed at 6:30 PM, the bike was still there, though fallen all the way over. I can't see someone leaving such a nice bike locked up there for 8 and a half hours. The owner must have returned. I suspect it's a spoiled rich kid who just abandoned the remains - a kid who expects "daddy" to buy them an entire new replacement bike and locks. :mad:
I'll next be by the transit center on Tuesday. I'm betting the frame, wheels, and locks will still be there - but that the entire drivetrain (and saddle too) will be gone.
Yesterday (Saturday) I took public transit "downtown" for breakfast. The bus arrived at the main transit center at 10 AM. As I started my walk to the restaurant, I passed a mountain bike locked up at the transit center. It was smartly leaned against a bike rack with a U-lock locking the rear wheel and frame to the rack, and a fancy new looking chain lock locking the front wheel and frame to the rack. "Overkill" I thought, but the "two types of locks" method allowed them to lock the frame to the rack doubly.
After consuming my breakfast and three newspapers, I walked past the transit center at Noon. Passing the bike racks I see a bike leaning over crazily. At first it looks like the owner had removed the front wheel and locked it along side the rear. "But wait! That's the same bike from earlier." Except it was now missing the suspension fork, stem, handlebars, brake levers, disc brake calipers, and brake cables.
So, in those two hours, a thief had removed the grips, loosened and slid off the shifter pods, unbolted the headset adjuster cap, loosened the stem, unbolted the rear caliper, freed the rear brake cable, released the front wheel, slid out the fork, and walked away with the parts. All that along a street with continuous pedestrian traffic, with buses entering or leaving the transit center every few minutes, and maybe a transit rent-a-cop yelling at cyclists to "Walk your bike". :eek: :eek: :eek:
Walking by again at 5 PM, I looked close enough to see that the bike was a vivid blue Kona Cinder Cone.
As my bus home departed at 6:30 PM, the bike was still there, though fallen all the way over. I can't see someone leaving such a nice bike locked up there for 8 and a half hours. The owner must have returned. I suspect it's a spoiled rich kid who just abandoned the remains - a kid who expects "daddy" to buy them an entire new replacement bike and locks. :mad:
I'll next be by the transit center on Tuesday. I'm betting the frame, wheels, and locks will still be there - but that the entire drivetrain (and saddle too) will be gone.