The Hague - Police in a city in the bicycle-crazy Netherlands, fed up with high levels of theft, said on Tuesday they are leaving out two-wheelers secretly equipped with trackers to catch thieves.
"Bicycle theft is a type of criminality that often goes unpunished," police spokesperson Cornelie Hogeveen told AFP of the project in the central Dutch city of Amersfoort, which had a population of 144 858 and 900 bicycle thefts in 2010 - 10% of the city's total reported crimes.
In a six-month pilot project that started December 10, so-called "bait bikes" are being placed in different spots around town, "sometimes locked and sometimes not," said a police statement.
The lures "look just like normal bikes," according to Hogeveen.
Whenever a bike is removed, the police pick up its Global Positioning System (GPS) signal and start a trace.
"Sometimes the thief is already gone, sometimes we find other stolen bikes," the spokesperson said.
"It is a form of criminality that affects many in the Netherlands," she added. "Not only do they risk having their bikes stolen, but also buying a stolen bike.
"The Netherlands, which counts an estimated 18 million bicycles for 16.5 million inhabitants, registered a total 515 000 bicycle thefts in 2009, according to AVC, an organisation that tracks vehicle theft statistics.
http://www.news24.com/World/News/Dutch-police-bait-bicycle-thieves-20110125
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