Another one of meth's side effects: rampant bicycle theft and reassembly!

fruitfly

Bluelight Crew
Joined
Oct 28, 2003
Messages
8,071
'Meth heads' send bicycle thefts sky high
Police say methamphetamine users' urge to fiddle with bikes satisfies need to keep busy

Chris Mason, Times Colonist
Saturday, August 13, 2005

Crystal methamphetamine's method of destroying brain cells is well documented.

But police are now coming to a startling conclusion about another side-effect of the drug -- bike thefts are skyrocketing because crystal meth users, or "meth heads," find disassembling bikes and fiddling with bike parts satisfies their need to keep their hands busy while on the drug.

"We've come across lots of sites littered with bikes and bike parts," Const. Peter Lane said.

"They sit in the bush with hundreds of parts just fiddling with them all day."

Crystal meth is a stimulant, but because it destroys brain cells at such a rapid rate, its users are drawn to menial, repetitive activities.

"For some reason, they find fiddling with bike parts satisfies that need for stimulation," Lane said.

The result has been a huge increase in bike thefts, said Lane, who couldn't provide any figures.

The recent discovery of several bicycle "chop shops" hidden in the bushes of Victoria parks has drawn attention to the rise in thefts and its connection to crystal meth.

On Wednesday, police busted a chop shop under the Point Ellice Bridge, where they're regularly called by local businesses who spot people stashing bikes and bike parts.

A massive illegal campsite uncovered in Beacon Hill Park last weekend was littered with bikes and bike parts, while in mid-July, police cleared out a site on the edge of Cecelia Ravine Park that was strewn with bicycles.

Police are still investigating to what extent the bicycles are being reassembled with different parts, painted and sold on the streets for drug money.

Police often find crystal meth users carrying around tools to take apart and reassemble bikes so they can't be identified as stolen.

But going to such lengths often makes a stolen bike stand out even more.

"An officer gets suspicious when he sees a bike with a really expensive frame but rusty parts," Lane said.

It doesn't help them return the property to its original owners, however.

"When they've been taken apart and painted, it's really hard to identify them," Const. Theresa Tuttle said.

With theft rates rising, bicycle owners are struggling to protect their property.

Cycling advocate John Luton, who has lost parts off his bicycle several times, said cyclists need to take measures to protect their bikes, such as locking bikes in visible, high-traffic areas.

"People will grab anything if it's available," said Luton, executive director of Capital Bike and Walk.

He added insurance against bicycle theft is expensive and the deductible is often too high to make it worthwhile.

Link
 
LOL thats absurd

MORE like stealing the bikes to sell to get the dough to feed their gaak attack... keep it real
 
155pz.gif
 
Funny, but it is a HUGE problem here. I've seen numerous 'cheap' sets of handlebars that looked like they were off of a 4 year olds bike...
 
I live in victoria I just saw that article yesterday. There was also another article on the same page about products used to make meth being controlled
 
fruitfly said:
Crystal meth is a stimulant, but because it destroys brain cells at such a rapid rate, its users are drawn to menial, repetitive activities.

Yes, because all the people who don't use meth spend their time studying string theory and advanced mathematical problems.
Surely, no one who isn't brain damaged would have an interest in reassembling bikes! 8)
 
^^^

And propaganda wins again. When the media successfully can make people believe that a certain drug makes the user steal and reassemble bikes, it seems clearer and clearer to me evey day why prohibiton is still in use and supported by so many people.
 
^^ yes, they may be getting stolen so people can sell the parts to fund their addiction, but surely nobody is pinching them so they while away their day disassembling it and then reassembling it!
 
^^^
Stigmatization in progress. Spreading lies is a tactic embedded in drug prohibition everywhere.
 
A news article like this should be seen by the readers as an insult to their intelligence. They would not print this kind of rubbish unless they believed the readers were dumb and gullible enough to believe whatever they are told. A lot of people will believe it, unfortunately.

Meth is not nearly as damaging to the brain as they make it sound. If meth "destroys brain cells at such a rapid rate, its users are drawn to menial, repetitive activities" then I doubt if the government would allow it to be used as a prescription medication. And I don't think brain damage would cause them to be drawn to menial, repetitive activities.

Anyone with a little common sense should know that a meth addict is not going to steal bicycles just so they could take it apart and put it back together over and over again. I know that meth and other stimulants can make you want to be active and doing something but I doubt if they would want to do one thing all day, especially something as boring and pointless as assembling/disassembling a bike all day.

Meth addicts steal for the same reason as any other addict, to get money to buy their drugs. To believe they do it just for fun is laughable.

If they just want something to occupy them till the meth wears off they could surely come up with better things stealing and messing with bicycles.
 
My bike is currently fucked. this weekend I am going to get into the meth in the hopes I fix it up good.
 
Top