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Why don't gardai catch bike thieves?

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Comments

  • Closed Accounts Posts: 6,824 ✭✭✭Qualitymark


    we recovered a very unique bike the other night, and no mention of it anywhere in Ireland being stolen...

    Very well done!


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 3,195 ✭✭✭goldie fish


    It might, but only for a short time until they figure out something else. But it's an uphill struggle, we recovered a very unique bike the other night, and no mention of it anywhere in Ireland being stolen...

    Another one for the Public Auctions so?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 6,824 ✭✭✭Qualitymark


    Another one for the Public Auctions so?

    Or put it on the Garda TV programme, in a segment about the necessity to report bicycles stolen (which many people currently don't do because there's a perception that it's pointless because the Gardaí won't investigate anyway).


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,191 ✭✭✭foxcoverteddy


    To start it is easy to criticise, but if the government choose to reduce the number of garda or the funding you cannot expect any more than you are getting.
    I am not a Garda and have no affiliations, just using common sense.
    However the one item missing from all the posts on bike theft is insurance.
    One presumes that many of the bikes taken are high profile machines, which do not come cheap.
    I am probably doing this the wrong way round having not investigated cycle insurance, again I am presuming the frame number would be the identifying factor, I am also presuming that the new owner of the stolen machine will insure it.
    Like many classes of insurance statistics are kept to ensure companies are not taking known bad risks, this is within the industry in this country.
    I am again presuming that cycle claim losses can be circulated within the industry and when the the new owner goes to insure, warning lights indicate a claim has already been paid.
    I am against even more financial hardship but are we not getting to the point of compulsary bike insurance, compulsary helmets, reflector jackets etc.
    Given a badly ridden bike is as much of a danger as a motor propelled vehicle, and given stopping them in emergency is not that brilliant, should it become law for rider's to be insured.
    Home insurance in many cases covers third party claims and might include bikes kept on the premises, not everyone has home insurance unfortunately.
    Is this an unexplored avenue of attack on the scumbags of this world.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,644 ✭✭✭SerialComplaint


    Given a badly ridden bike is as much of a danger as a motor propelled vehicle, and given stopping them in emergency is not that brilliant, should it become law for rider's to be insured.
    Sorry, but this is nonsense. Cars kill hundreds of people each year and maim others. You could count the number of incidents caused by cyclists that involve serious injury on one or two hands.

    I think you're getting mixed up between property insurance (the value of the bike) and liability insurance (the value of any injuries or damaged caused by the cyclist).


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 6,824 ✭✭✭Qualitymark


    However the one item missing from all the posts on bike theft is insurance.

    Most bicycles are uninsured; bicycle insurance is very expensive.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,191 ✭✭✭foxcoverteddy


    Well my friend I did not get mixed up and it was to illustrate a problem and not taken as by your goodself.
    I tried to insure a 1500 euro bike, easy fork out the 165euro and it is insured on line, no question as to the frame number.
    Identifying bikes is probably very difficult for anyone except an expert, the only true method is the frame number.
    If someone loses a bike and claims there is nothing to identify the same bike being insured elsewhere or even with the same insurer, right.
    Identity is the key, and compulsary insurance, as our friend pointed out the b ike and injury are different, so very true, but at the moment many cyclist have neither so in the event of a happening how does the injured party get re-imbursed?
    Insurer's would be able to assist the Garda with stolen bikes details aqnd also if and who was re-insuring them.
    You can of course say nonsense, rubbish etc but unless you go down a more stringent path, bikes will get dearer and the loss greater, and of course our scum bags are still laughing.
    Come up with some other idea but don't winge at any attempt to protect our pride and joy, unfortunately it is normally the old who have nothing better to do. Have a nice day, time to clean the bike, bye


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 6,824 ✭✭✭Qualitymark


    Identity is the key, and compulsary insurance, as our friend pointed out the b ike and injury are different, so very true, but at the moment many cyclist have neither so in the event of a happening how does the injured party get re-imbursed?

    I couldn't really afford €150+ to insure my bicycle against theft. I'd like to think that good policing and sensible locking would be its best protection.

    As far as I know, my household insurance covers damage to anyone I may crash into and injure (highly unlikely, thank goodness) as I pedal slowly along on the push bike in the cycle lane.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,047 ✭✭✭are you serious


    I couldn't really afford €150+ to insure my bicycle against theft. I'd like to think that good policing and sensible locking would be its best protection.

    Just picking out one point here Qualitymark.. "Good Policing" as you put it happens all day every day, but Gardaí can not (contrary to popular belief) be everywhere you may want them to be at one time...

    Going by your statement, nobody should insure anything against theft then..? Come off it...!!


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,191 ✭✭✭foxcoverteddy


    hang on lads, my suggestion was an attempt to promote an idea to stop the theft of bikes, it did not intend for anyone to fall out with someone.
    Yes of course bike insurance is dear, so are some of the bikes.
    Of course there are those amongst us who would have difficulty paying the premiums, like me for instance.
    However insurers could put a spoke so to speak in the scum bags operation, registration of frame numbers can be the only way forward.
    Come on lets pedal together to beat the robber's.


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 6,824 ✭✭✭Qualitymark


    Going by your statement, nobody should insure anything against theft then..? Come off it...!!

    Not what I said.
    However insurers could put a spoke so to speak in the scum bags operation, registration of frame numbers can be the only way forward.
    Come on lets pedal together to beat the robber's.

    It's also possible that if there was (affordable) insurance, the large and politically powerful insurance companies would use their influence to force the Gardaí to change their attitude to bicycle thefts.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,191 ✭✭✭foxcoverteddy


    You cannot expect the garda to, lets be honest their job is difficult enough, bikes have no visible means of identification and unless one is well up on bikes how do you expect someone to say, that looks like the bike that was stolen etc.
    In any case how would you feel if you were stopped for your bike to be checked for some identity, there would be a great howl, and shouts of Garda brutality.
    Do you know, when our bobby had his BMX bike stolen in Dungarvan about six or seven weeks ago we went to Halfords and said we didn't take down the frame number, could you give us the information? No was the answer because according to our branch they have no record of frame number's.
    Do other bike shops operate on the same principle?
    If you want to reduce bike crime then it has to be way of registration, at least we would have a record of stolen frames, at present anyone buying a secondhand bike has no idea if it is a genuine sale or stolen.
    An official website with a list of stolen frame number's would allow the would be buyer to check, so that the bike couldn't be registered, the seller then reported to the Garda.
    We are not talking cheapo bikes or kiddies bikes nor old hacks which have no value only to the owner, it is the prestige makes and the serious cyclist machines.
    The cycle industry and owners have to work with the Garda, saying I have lost my whatever machine go and find it and arrest the culprit, it is just not on. Isn't it like leaving the keys in the ignition and wandering off to the shops.
    Can anyone give a better view point on how to stop criminals, if they cannot sell them there is little point stealing them in the first place.
    Of course one is presupposing that no serious cyclist would buy a machine which he or she believed had been stolen, would they?
    Foxy


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 6,824 ✭✭✭Qualitymark


    In any case how would you feel if you were stopped for your bike to be checked for some identity.

    I'd be fecking delighted.

    Indeed, this used to happen in the 1960s and before, and you could be asked to prove with a receipt (with a frame number on it) that the bicycle was yours.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,191 ✭✭✭foxcoverteddy


    Qualitymark, me thinks we are on the same wavelength, thanks mate


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 9 esf2012


    As far as I know, my household insurance covers damage to anyone I may crash into and injure

    Exactly why would insurance covering a stationary building have collision cover for third party property? Bike theft, yeah but covering a Mercedes that you smashed into? I seriously doubt that's part of any standard policy.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 6,824 ✭✭✭Qualitymark


    esf2012 wrote: »
    Exactly why would insurance covering a stationary building have collision cover for third party property? Bike theft, yeah but covering a Mercedes that you smashed into? I seriously doubt that's part of any standard policy.

    No idea, but so I've heard. I may have been misinformed, don't know.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,788 ✭✭✭Vikings


    use their influence to force the Gardaí to change their attitude to bicycle thefts.

    And just what is that attitude? I'd imagine most Gardaí treat bicycle thefts the same as any other crime involving property be it shoplifting or mobile phone thefts etc.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,191 ✭✭✭foxcoverteddy


    seriously, this really has nothing to do with what House Insurance covers or doesn't cover.
    Mercedes Benz and crashing etc are red herrings, and in fairness do nothing to bring us close to nabbing the culprits who take our bikes.
    Whilst I appreciate there is always some dilema in legal inferences to insurance which is not helped by the insurance companies, we are trying to go down an avenue solely for the protection of bikes.
    Bike insurance on it's own is costly, maybe one could get an extension to an existing household policy, but it would be necessary to satisfy oneself that the cover is equal to the individual contract.
    We are striving to get a system of registration that insurers can incorporate into their system which identifies cycles they are insuring and claims being made for lost/stolen machines.
    The sheer lack of record keeping can and no doubt leads to the same company paying for the loss of the same bike more than once.
    Apart from protecting our bikes we could well have created a few hundred jobs, no mean feat.
    Anyone buying a secondhand bike will be able to check to see if the frame is listed as a lost or stolen before handing over the cash.
    Any seller who wants no part of this would immediately be suspect.
    We m ight just be able to get an original registration for each bike, new ones would automzatically be given this unique number and a record created for that and the frame number with brief details of the bike.
    We would not perhaps burden the Garda with administrative duties which no doubt they could well do without.
    It means no bikes can be sold or purchased without being registered.
    The garda could of course stop any cyclist to check the details if they so wished.
    Would this help?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 9 esf2012


    seriously, this really has nothing to do with what House Insurance covers or doesn't cover.
    Mercedes Benz and crashing etc are red herrings, and in fairness do nothing to bring us close to nabbing the culprits who take our bikes.
    Whilst I appreciate there is always some dilema in legal inferences to insurance which is not helped by the insurance companies, we are trying to go down an avenue solely for the protection of bikes.
    Bike insurance on it's own is costly, maybe one could get an extension to an existing household policy, but it would be necessary to satisfy oneself that the cover is equal to the individual contract.
    We are striving to get a system of registration that insurers can incorporate into their system which identifies cycles they are insuring and claims being made for lost/stolen machines.
    The sheer lack of record keeping can and no doubt leads to the same company paying for the loss of the same bike more than once.
    Apart from protecting our bikes we could well have created a few hundred jobs, no mean feat.
    Anyone buying a secondhand bike will be able to check to see if the frame is listed as a lost or stolen before handing over the cash.
    Any seller who wants no part of this would immediately be suspect.
    We m ight just be able to get an original registration for each bike, new ones would automzatically be given this unique number and a record created for that and the frame number with brief details of the bike.
    We would not perhaps burden the Garda with administrative duties which no doubt they could well do without.
    It means no bikes can be sold or purchased without being registered.
    The garda could of course stop any cyclist to check the details if they so wished.
    Would this help?

    The insurance thing was only that it caught me as a strange inclusion in a policy, that and the fact that quality constantly relies on what some birdy told him to be cold hard facts.

    In regards your post above, I could not agree more but any such move has to start with owners taking some responsibility for the property and that means knowing the serial number and using bike racks instead of random trees.

    Its simple not good enough that people complain about the Gardai not solving bike thefts when half the time the victims can barely tell you the colour nevermind the make or model (and as for serial numbers, could find the meaning of life faster)


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,191 ✭✭✭foxcoverteddy


    thanks for your post, I of course presumed anyone with a bike over 200 euro is going to take some modicum of care, the dearer the bike the greater the care, though that should not be a factor as they represent a substantial outlay.
    However perhaps there is a factor that has been overlooked, are the bikes stolen not insured, though reading the post's many appear to be buying the best locks etc.
    I think the insurance premium could well be set to discourage those who are less careful.
    We used to live in a house with a long hall, the bike was never left out, actually I did the same with a motorcycle, which was a bit dodgy to say the least, the guy next door was not a happy bunny.
    Back to where we were, perhaps more information may come to light as to moving forward if not this idea maybe something better.
    Good Luck, Foxy


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,644 ✭✭✭SerialComplaint


    I passed by DIT Aungier St today, where three likely lads were humping away with a large hacksaw at some poor bugger's bike. I rang 999, and it took four minutes for me to get through to the Gardai. I guess the lads probably had the bike before I even got through, let alone before a Garda arrived.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 6,824 ✭✭✭Qualitymark


    I passed by DIT Aungier St today, where three likely lads were humping away with a large hacksaw at some poor bugger's bike. I rang 999, and it took four minutes for me to get through to the Gardai. I guess the lads probably had the bike before I even got through, let alone before a Garda arrived.

    Photo ftw


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,191 ✭✭✭foxcoverteddy


    I am sorry but perhaps I am reading your post wrong, it seems you are complaining about the Garda. Well if you are not allowed to recruit new entrants, have your funding cut, what does the public expect.
    It is the government, Kenny and his cronies who are responsible for this current situation, and it is to them your criticism should be levelled.
    I am not saying the Garda are perfect but without them we would be in a worse state, the hoodlums, scumbags would walk all over us.
    Yes we need to do something about the bikes, did you take any pictures of these thieves?
    You might have valuable info on who is responsible, we have to do our bit you know.
    But thanks for posting, every little helps.
    Enjoy the day, Foxy


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 6,824 ✭✭✭Qualitymark


    Someone on the Stolen Bikes thread just had a bicycle returned by Drugs Squad gardaí who took it from someone they were questioning and checked the frame number http://www.boards.ie/vbulletin/showthread.php?t=2056226324&page=45 - excellent work!


  • Registered Users Posts: 95 ✭✭Dalkeybabe


    Off topic here but when someone reports their card has been skimmed to me, I tell them stop using atm machines and only ever use laser and ask for cash back... Is this also bad support...? I think not as it greatly reduces the chance of it happening again!


    A friend of mine works in Finance & after going to various fraud seminars said now he only goes to ATM's beside/in banks & not the ones that are separate to them (aka the one beside Tara Street Dart station which has been decommissioned). The latter are very prone to being hacked.


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 6,824 ✭✭✭Qualitymark




  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 3,935 Mod ✭✭✭✭Turner


    Pity about the sentence.

    Alot of work would have went into the case with alot of tax payers money paying for it and the subsequent court case.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 6,824 ✭✭✭Qualitymark


    Turner wrote: »
    Pity about the sentence.

    Alot of work would have went into the case with alot of tax payers money paying for it and the subsequent court case.

    Pfft, First offence. if they do the same again the (long) suspended sentences will come into effect. Good result all round.

    Edit: Or so I thought, but apparently one person convicted was already on a suspended sentence and got another suspended sentence. I thought the point of a suspended sentence was that it was suspended unless they were convicted of another offence, in which case it came into effect?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,308 ✭✭✭✭Potential-Monke


    I thought the point of a suspended sentence was that it was suspended unless they were convicted of another offence, in which case it came into effect?

    That's the way it's supposed to work...


  • Registered Users Posts: 294 ✭✭eoinkildare




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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 275 ✭✭jacob2


    we were selling our sons bike on a poplar web site it was never used as it was quicker for him to get the bus to work so we put up for sale one person came to see it it turned out that the person was a garda stating that a bike was stolen the same as my sons he had no serial number of the other bike which was stolen we all the document of the bike we were selling all he said it was the same as the one that we were selling should the guards have a serial number before knocking at some one door and upseting the family because the bike is the same wen a bike factory makes a bike they dont only make one they make thousands thats why they have serial numbers


  • Registered Users Posts: 294 ✭✭eoinkildare


    Would you prefer they just told people who reported their bike stolen that they weren't even going to try to locate it because they didn't have the serial number?
    Think how grateful you would be if your son's bike had been stolen and they recovered it for you...


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,308 ✭✭✭✭Potential-Monke


    Would you prefer they just told people who reported their bike stolen that they weren't even going to try to locate it because they didn't have the serial number?
    Think how grateful you would be if your son's bike had been stolen and they recovered it for you...

    Well without a serial number, or some other way of definitely identifying the bike, there is no evidence. Sure, any Garda can knock on anyone's door to ask any question, but without evidence the Garda can't demand* that it be handed over.

    *When I say demand, I mean use actual law to seize the property as evidence. A Garda can ask anything, but can only demand that which is protected by law.


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