Surrey Police work with ATB Sales to help fight bike theft

BikeBiz (Carlton Reid) reported yesterday that a bike crime across Surrey has been reduced by a police sting operation that involved Marin’s UK distributor ATB Sales.

ATB supplied a new bike which was used as bait to catch cycle thieves in the act. The bike – a Marin hardtail – was chained to a set of railings in Guildford with an inferior lock to tempt the bike snatchers.

230 bikes had been stolen in the Guildford area in a three month period.

The operation was the brainchild of neighbourhood police officer Sean Burridge. He said:

ATB gave us a great bike and it was just what we needed. Bike crime over the past six months has fallen by 50 percent as a result of this and several other initiatives.

Ross Patterson, ATB’s sales and marketing director, said:

This operation highlights the need for good bike security and the merits of a strong lock.

The police put an Immobitag transponder in the bike’s frame. This allows them to identify stolen bikes and return to their rightful owners. ATB’s Platinum Care programme includes insurance and a subsidised purchase of a transponder device.

For more some very informative advice on bike security please go to: http://quickrelease.tv/?p=327

To read the source story please go to: BikeBiz

Home Office unveils technologies to help protect Britain’s 75m mobile phone users from crime

stolenmobilephonesThree new design innovations to tackle mobile phone crime, including a device that locks a phone and alerts the owner if it is taken away from them, have been unveiled today. The prototypes were developed by teams of designers and technology experts as part of the Mobile Phone Security Challenge, an initiative from the Home Office Design and Technology Alliance and the Design Council, with support and funding from the Technology Strategy Board.

Although the adoption of the designs by the industry is by no means guaranteed, very few people disagree that more needs to be done to address crime relating to mobile phones and portable devices. Although overall crime has dropped since 1997, according to research performed by the University of Leicester, the type of crimes being committed has changed. Their findings suggest that a decade ago burglary was attractive to criminals as they would find households containing DVD players, videos etc that were easy to sell on. These days DVD players cost as little as £20 so have hardly any resale value.

As the phones and media devices we carry around with us have become more powerful, their values have increased and along with it their attractiveness to criminals.

Commenting on the research findings criminology lecturer James Treadwell said:

While we might have seen a decline in some types of crime, we have seen a rise in other forms of criminal activity, particularly young people who seem to be mugging one another

DVD players for example, got cheaper, certain consumer items became smaller and were very, very expensive and sought after, and so the latest mobile phone, or the latest iPod, which people carry about them, have become targets for robbers.

Mobile phone crime will never be an easy issue to address especially as devices become enabled for mobile payments, but new designs and initiatives like the Immobilise National Property Register / NMPR will continue to combat crime.

Links:

Immobilise National Property Register
Home Office: New technologies unveiled to help protect Britain’s 75m mobile phone users from crime
BBC News: Crime targets affected by drop in goods prices