Stolen Mobile Phone Leads To Full Scale Manhunt

In Palo Alto, mobile phone theft is taken very seriously. If you think I’m exaggerating, then consider this: Officers from three law enforcement agencies conducted a full-on manhunt – complete with a helicopter search – just because some guy stole a Droid.

Apparently, the thief asked to briefly borrow someone’s mobile phone and instead of returning it simply hopped onto a potentially stolen bicycle and rode away with the gadget. Shortly after the crime was reported, an officer spotted the thief and chased him on foot until the criminal escaped out of sight.

At this point authorities knew they had a very slippery fellow on their hands and proceeded to set up a perimeter, conduct yard-to-yard searches, alarm nearby residents of the evildoer in their midst and take advantage of a sheriff’s helicopter that was in the area.

This was all part of a perfectly reasonable response to such a crime, by the way:

When asked after authorities called off the manhunt whether the response fit the crime, Nielepko said, “I think the helicopter is what threw more attention to this.” He added that the response was both standard and appropriate.

“Whenever we see there’s a threat to public safety, we’re going to dedicate any resources we have to apprehend that person,” he said.

“The threat to public safety would be an unknown person jumping through citizens’ backyards.”

Oh, and in case you were wondering, the thief wasn’t caught by the time the manhunt was called off. [Mercury News via Farhad Manjoo]

Image by Dusan Bartolovic/ShutterStock

Discuss

(6 Comments)
  • [–]

    Lamboman007

    Friday, October 8, 2010 at 6:46 AM

    Can’t wait till Hollywood turns this story into a movie :D

  • [–]

    Kariya

    Friday, October 8, 2010 at 8:17 AM

    I bet he was wishing it was an iphone so he could have tracked it through Find My iPhone

    • [–]

      Bigmac

      Friday, October 8, 2010 at 8:46 AM

      Yeah, because there is no way whatsoever to track a stolen Android :P

    • [–]

      Daniel Weaver-Koenigs

      Friday, October 8, 2010 at 5:24 PM

      Pity you have to pay for mobileme for the feature.

      • [–]

        bob

        Tuesday, January 11, 2011 at 11:55 AM

        Its free now.

  • [–]

    ChemZ

    Friday, October 8, 2010 at 8:53 PM

    A stolen mobile is “public safety” risk? Guess it wouldn’t take much to get the secret service involved… :P

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