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Slob tries to steal bike in Fields Corner

Fields Corner bike thief 7-31-2018. 5:15 PM

After finding a bit of cable on the sidewalk on the way home last night, a Fields Corner resident took a look at the day's video from her surveillance system - and watched this slob getting the bike ready for the taking, only he couldn't cut through the second chain securing it and gave up.

She adds she knows the bike's owner, who told her he had not asked for help from this Lance Armstrong doppleganger to free it.

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Comments

but he's also a litterbug!

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Addicts are the worst litterers!! They're favorite thing is to drop sticky drinks all over the sidewalks or train floors. MassDOT just installed a beautiful new stone stepway with a ledge at Forest Hills and I saw one guy puking all over it as he nodded back and forth in another world.

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of him to find that nice spot behind the tree for his trash.

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Though it was bad, it was not the worst thing he did.

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Anyone ever confronted someone trying to cut a bike lock? They would obviously say the bike belongs to them, so what do you do next? I guess I'd take a photo of them before hand if I was going to confront them.

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No bolt cutters, but I walked by a guy stripping the tumblers off one of those combination locks (you know, line up the numbers 1234 or whatever and the lock opens.) It took me a while to figure out what was going on, but thankfully my son stopped to look at something else nearby, giving me the chance to ponder what was going on. I walked up to the guy, asked what he was doing, and he left. Interestingly, not 2 minutes later the woman who owned the bike came up. I didn't have the presence of mind to snap a photo of the guy, but I did offer to give a statement to a cop if she wanted to. I think she just up and left, bike intact but lock ruined.

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I left a hammer on my front steps by mistake and of course it disappeared. Some people are the worst.

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It's not the people. It's what addiction does to the people.

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Bike thieves aren't necessarily addicts. Plenty of bikes get stolen when there isn't a narco epidemic on.

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I don't have to know the guy. I can just tell by his body motion and mannerisms he's on heroin or another narcotic. I've been there and that's the culture.

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How do you know that?. Looks like a scumbag to me,I'm sticking with scumbag.

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Why is the drug addicts problem, the bike owners problem?Keep your problems to yourselves.

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actually invested in a par of bolt cutters. He was thinking ahead. Addicts do not think ahead.

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Does anyone know what street this is? There's a lot of traffic and the guy was pretty brazen about what he was doing, with his bright yellow tool. Someone walks right by him near the end of the video as he is putting his tool back in the bag.

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if you confronted someone doing this, they'll likely claim it's their bike. Moreover, you don't know if they'll get violent. Furthermore, you don't know if anyone else will have your back. Also, people who might theoretically want to have your back may find themselves confronted with a "he said, he said" situation.

Several years ago, while living in Portland, Oregon, I saw a very strange thing happen. I was walking back to my office with lunch in hand, and went down a street parallel to the one I usually took. Behind me, two very slow-moving men came running up. They appeared in decent shape physically, but were both clearly addled in some fashion, either psychologically or pharmacologically, given their strained but very slow running speeds.

The one in "first" in this race got himself to a vehicle, keys in hand, and threw the door open. As he jumped in, the other guy grabbed him, and dragged him back out into the street. Mind you, this was right in downtown Portland, on a street with shops, bistros, and offices.

A fight of sorts broke out as the guys kept pulling and pushing one another. At least one of them appeared to have a sandwich in a bag, though who knows if it was actually a sandwich. A few of us had stopped, and watched this very strange incident of two 30ish, relatively well-dressed guys struggling against each other in slow-motion, with completely no words being said by either of them. At about 12:30 PM on a weekday.

Should we jump in? Try to break them up? Are they on drugs? Will one of them produce a knife or gun? Will anyone have my back if I get involved? Is this a robbery? Do these two clowns know each other? What the hell is going on? Is this some kind of "Candid Camera" situation? Are we being punked?

As these questions are running through my mind, the guy with the keys manages to break free, jump in the car, close the door, and drive off. The other guy is left looking exasperated, and wanders off.

I still don't know what it is I actually witnessed. I can say that I've seen Dateline type show in which they chained a bike up in a park, then had actors take bolt cutters or other tools (a handsaw, etc.) and try to break the chain to see how passersby would react.

When a black guy was trying to "steal" the bike, angry white people grabbed the tool(s) out of his hands and demanded to know why he was in the neighborhood to begin with. When a white guy was trying to "steal" the bike, people said and did nothing. When a white woman was trying to "steal" the bike, some people actually stopped and tried to help her make off with the bike.

All of this is a very long way of saying that these situations are at least somewhat more complicated than just "Stop that guy!!"

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n/t

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It's on Dot Ave at Adams St., on the east side of the street, in front of home.stead cafe.

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Is there a website where people and businesses who have private cams can post videos like this searchable by neighborhood and crime? There is really nothing that can be done about this petty stuff but we are now able to clearly catch these kind of things on cam. Getting these faces and activities out in the open may help the problem. I also assume that the police and parole officers may know some of these folks and could take some action.

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I don't want to tell the guy how to improve this process, but it doesn't seem as though using tree pruners instead of bolt cutters is working for him. that and, i imagine, a lot of other things in his life.

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Hardrock backpack. Nike shoes.

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the guy had to backpedal once the bike spoke.

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for littering and carrying a disposable plastic bag instead of reusable one.

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Rather than confront a person with bolt cutters, why not discreetly take their picture and call the police? Would the police come?

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Is this really a surveillance system? It seems to bob around and then follow the guy, zoom in and out etc.. Or is it handheld video by Neighborhood watch etc?

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I think it's a cell phone video of the security system playback.

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that many people suffering from addiction compulsively litter. drink containers appear to be fav.

this guy though.....maybe because I'm a cyclist.....but i want to punch him

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Doubt he's a junkie...has too many possessions - bolt cutters, backpack, shades, looks like maybe a watch and a back of butts he left on ground. If you've ever seen a typical Dot Ave junkie, you know what I mean.

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