GeordieMark
Member
Don't start none and there won't be none. Few of these trashy teens take a dirt nap and I doubt the rest will want to stay around and see who is next. But do that in cali and your ass gets sued to oblivion.
Bad. Ass.
Don't start none and there won't be none. Few of these trashy teens take a dirt nap and I doubt the rest will want to stay around and see who is next. But do that in cali and your ass gets sued to oblivion.
For once, I'd like to see in the news what happens when a perpetrator of a petty crime like this actually runs into a violent perpetrator of organized crime.
Yeah, I am and it was. Even in Canada. It was mostly just individual attacks and some time the swarmers were really young. Like unarmed 12 and 13 year olds knocking down and attacking an old person. It was really maddening because they thought it was so cool to sucker punch a defenseless guy for a few bucks in his wallet.Aren't you an older guy or am I thinking of someone else (the avatar)? I only ask because this kind of behavior was rampant back in the late 70's and early to mid eighties.
But isn't the violent perpetrator of organized crime probably a bigger menace to society?
Or you know, teens being straight up assholes. Which is a thing they do in every country, from time to time. White ones. poor ones. Rich ones.
Can confirm. Grew up with rich kids and lower middle class kids.
Petty theft was basically a fun way to spend an afternoon for some kids. Didn't need anything they stole.
Might not be the case with these kids but I also wouldn't be surprised if they just did it for the thrill.
Bart is probably the worst of the worst. It was designed and installed with a proprietary track and loading gauge, so it cannot use off-the-shelf components. For... Reasons...
But the main problem is in Democratic states transit is typically well funded, but they do not negotiate against labor.
In Republican states transit is typically poorly funded, but the do negotiate against labor.
Or you know, teens being straight up assholes. Which is a thing they do in every country, from time to time. White ones. poor ones. Rich ones.
Oakland used to be way more dangerous in the 70s and 80s, btw.
To be honest, western civilization is pretty much fucked by now. The only "simple" solution is horrible, more cameras, more guards, more guns.
Ah of course it's the workers who are to blame! God forbid vital work is done by professionals that are compensated fairly for their work.
The second avenue subway is largely to do geography and a start and stops
Second, the city must be more realistic about labor costs. In New York, because of both state and federal laws, a basic laborer earns $79.63 an hour, including benefits; an ironworker earns $96.69. These are hard jobs to do, and merit good pay. But union rules keep productivity low. New York requires twice as many to five times as many workers on a tunnel-boring machine compared to non-union states and European countries.
Go easy on em, Ip Man.Would fight, no teen steals my shit
So they have to split the contents of a few purses between 50 people? This makes no sense.
Someone post that Sopranos GIF where Bobby gets Fucked up by those 14 year olds.For once, I'd like to see in the news what happens when a perpetrator of a petty crime like this actually runs into a violent perpetrator of organized crime.
Could be, but how many groups of 50 kids do you know that are thieving/assaulting assholes that aren't in some type of gang?
i wish this guy was on that train
MAN GETS CHOKED OUT FOR HARASSING PASSENGERS ON SUBWAY - Double Toasted Highlight
This is some 90s comic disgruntled teen being used by the Shredder shit. Where were the cops/security?
In a statement, BART said it's working with other agencies to bring the juveniles to justice.
"We have created additional overtime shifts for officers who will be visibly patrolling stations, and video is being pulled from both the train cars and station cameras. Our investigators will be distributing the footage among local law enforcement agencies as well as school districts, where we have had previous success in arresting juveniles who commit crimes on BART."
BART said it's not releasing video footage to the public because of the youths appeared to be juveniles.
The transit agency added that overall crime on BART has been declining "and we want to stress that this robbery is neither reflective of the safety of our system nor of public transportation generally. We strive to provide a safe place for our passengers, and condemn this unprecedented, unacceptable, violent behavior in the strongest of terms."
In its statement, BART also said it's working diligently to reduce the likelihood of this type of crime occurring again.
BART investigators have made their first arrest in connection with last Saturday evenings takeover robbery by dozens of juveniles who mobbed a train at Coliseum Station in Oakland, officials said Friday.
The arrest of a male juvenile took place around 12:30 p.m. Friday, said Jeffrey Jennings, BARTs acting police chief. No details were released about where the arrest took place or where the suspect lives.
More warrants for multiple identified suspects on the way, BART said in a tweet announcing the initial arrest.
The arrest came a day after Jennings declared an rare state of emergency for his department in response to a rise in robberies and other crimes on BART. Such declarations have typically happened in the past during protests, not amid crime concerns.
Under the declaration, BART officers must work mandatory overtime and cannot take discretionary time off.
In the mob robbery, BART said, at least 40 juveniles jumped the fare gates and rushed aboard at least two cars of a Dublin-bound train at Coliseum Station shortly before 9:30 p.m. Some members of the group held doors open, stalling the train, while others ran through cars and some robbed and assaulted passengers.
By the time BART police arrived, five minutes after the initial call for help from the station, the youths had already scattered.
Overall, crime was up on BART by roughly 22 percent in the first three months of 2017 compared to the same period last year, Jennings told the BART board of directors on Thursday at an unusual evening meeting. Much of the spike involved the theft of cell phones and other electronic devices.
The rise comes despite a drop so far in 2017 in car break-ins, as well as automobile and bicycle thefts, Jennings said. It also reverses three years of declining crime rates.
I would've fuck them up one by one
All 50 of them huh...I would've fuck them up one by one
I would've fuck them up one by one
lmao. ok John Wick
I would've fuck them up one by one
But 50 though? Now if he teamed up with Snackman they could do it no problem.
I would've fuck them up one by one
I would've fuck them up one by one
Hope that kid squeals.
If those kids were prepared to die, even John Wick would get killed 50 people in a cramped subway car is no joke.
For the second time in three months, a large group of teenagers committed a violent robbery at BART's Coliseum Station in Oakland, snatching a phone from a woman and then punching and kicking a 62-year-old passenger who chased them and demanded the return of the device, police and witnesses said.
The latest attack — which occurred during the evening commute Friday — had a more positive ending than the first one. The rider who took action wasn't badly hurt and managed to retrieve the iPhone 7 for the victim, while at least 10 fleeing juveniles were intercepted by a special BART team dedicated to fighting robberies on the transit system.
After a mob of teens robbed and beat riders at the same station on April 22, BART did not immediately announce what had happened, even though the agency communicates with customers in a number of ways, including a website, an app, email alerts, a Facebook account and Twitter feeds. The Chronicle was first to report the robbery two days later.
At that time, BART pointed out that a summary of the incident had appeared in a daily crime log available to reporters over email. After that, media outlets began paying more attention to the logs and reporting the crimes listed on them. A month ago, the agency stopped producing and sharing the logs.