Two Los Angeles bike couriers turned Good Samaritan on Monday when they pursued a bike thief for five blocks and knocked him off the bike, causing him to flee.
The LAPD is now searching for the miscreant, whom it describes as “a 30-year-old man with a torn shirt, a possibly sprained ankle, as well as road rash."
The bike’s owner, 43-year-old Jesus Tobar, had been exercising at the 24-hour-fitness gym in downtown LA when he discovered that his Iron Horse Desperado mountain bike had disappeared, and went back to the gym to see if the perpetrator had been caught on CCTV.
But two of LA’s finest – in this case, couriers, not police – had witnessed the theft, and were already on the case, chasing the thief through busy streets and across pavements until one caught him and pulled him to the ground by dragging his shirt. The man then fled, enabling the couriers to recover the bike.
Commander Andrew Smith of the LAPD was quoted on the website LA Now as saying: "This was a wild, high-speed bicycle chase through crowded streets of the Jewelry Mart."
As reported earlier this month on road.cc, bike theft is becoming increasingly prevalent in the city, with cyclists starting to administer their own form of street justice when suspected thieves are caught – recently, two were relieved of their clothes, backpacks and mobile phones, and left to find their way home dressed only in their boxer shorts.
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in this country, the couriers would be prosecuted for riding on the pavement!
neilwheel; isn't it the tires that squeal in a high speed chase (unless you have left the hand brake on)?
COURIERS : high-speed chases are nothing without the squeal of brakes.
Good reason to get some.
if you did that here you'd probably be arrested for attempted murder, or at the minimum, assaiult.
Which is crappy.
Be interesting if it caught on here too.