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Was your bike stolen in the Berkeley area?
Officers tagged the more than 500 bikes in the store’s inventory, marking down the serial numbers and checking them against the state registry which records the numbers bicycle owners report when their wheels are stolen.
Police Raid Telegraph Shop, Seize Stolen, Altered Bikes By RICHARD BRENNEMAN
Berkeley police officers sorted through hundreds of used bikes Wednesday as they searched for hot wheels at a well known cyclery.
The platoon of uniformed officers, accompanied by a plainclothes detective or two from the Stolen Property Unit, were execu ting a warrant served on Karim Cycles at 2800 Telegraph Ave.
On its Internet site, the store advertises “the largest selection (of used street bikes) in the San Francisco, Oakland, Berkeley area.” The store is also featured on “Bike Berkeley” page of the city’s website.
Though the store was closed when officers arrived, officers summoned a locksmith, who made short work of the door.
“The search warrant was based on the earlier recovery of three stolen bikes from the shop,” said Berkeley police spokespe rson Officer Joe Okies.
Officers tagged the more than 500 bikes in the store’s inventory, marking down the serial numbers and checking them against the state registry which records the numbers bicycle owners report when their wheels are stolen.
Officers from Property Crimes, the department’s bicycle unit and other details were assigned to the search.
By the time the search was completed, 17 bikes had been hauled off to the evidence locker, including one confirmed set of hot wheels and 16 others with il legally removed, obliterated and altered serial numbers.
Owner Ali Karim wasn’t present during the search, but detectives later made contact with him, said Okies.
No arrests were made, and the case is still under investigation.
Neighbors who stopped to look as the search progressed said they weren’t surprised by the raid.
Visitors to the ‘bikes for sale’ section of the Craigslist.org website left their comments about the raid, as well as photographs they took of the officers in action.
Readers at ano ther website advised the owner of an expensive stolen bike to search for his bicycle at the Telegraph Avenue shop.
While one of the craigslist writers urged those who have had bikes stolen to contact Berkeley Police to see if their wheels had been spotted during the raid, Okies demurred.
“The important thing is for bicycle owners to write down the serial numbers and then report the numbers to police if their bikes are stolen,” he said.
Officers serving the warrant had only the serial numbers of stolen bikes already reported before the raid, he said.
“If you haven’t reported the number, there’s not much we can do,” Okies added.
For more information:
http://berkeleydailyplanet.com/article.cfm...
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what's the matter with craigslist? It's a great resource.
But the point is, there were stolen bikes. There were also bikes with serial numbers removed. A decent bike shop would never purchase such a bike.
Reputable bike shop owners have a pretty good idea when someone tries to pawn off a stolen bike as simply a "used" bike. Is it a regular customer? Or is it someone you've never seen before? Have the shop ever repaired it in the past? One has to wonder if Karim made a habit of "no questions asked" and bought these bikes repeatedly from the same person(s).
My only experience with Karim and his disastrous mess of a shop was going for a look, and seeing it was too crowded to even walk through the store. Outside, he was trying to sell a heap of a bike to some newbies. A cyclist was filling up her tires at the airpump. She tried to give the newbies some advice in a friendly way, and Karim practically shoved her off the sidewalk, ripping the air hose out of her hands with an abusive torrent of words. Yeah, she probably shouldn't have messed with his sale, but his response was way over the top. The newbies were disgusted, as was I, and it certainly left a bad impression of the kind of person Karim is.
Bottom line is, if you think you're getting an incredible deal, then someone probably got ripped off, whether the bike's previous owner, or you- due to your own inexperience in buying a used bike.