Read Confessions of a Police Constable Online
Authors: Matt Delito
Simon tapped my shoulder and beckoned me to step aside for a second.
âCells are full, mate. We just had to take someone to Yankee Romeo, and that was the last of their cells, as well. We'll be taking bodies
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to Essex next,' he huffed.
Yankee Romeo is the borough code for Lewisham â and it's nowhere near our own borough. It was no big surprise that cells were full everywhere: many boroughs had been doing a series of raids at the homes of people identified, thanks to CCTV, as having been involved in recent riots across London. However, having to take our prisoner all the way outside the Metropolitan Police area because of full cells would be a royal pain, not least because there was only 15 minutes left of my shift, and a trip to Essex would mean several hours' overtime. Usually, I'd welcome the overtime for the wage bump it implies, but after my tenth straight 12-hour shift, I'd gladly have paid to be able to go home and sleep for a few ⦠well â¦
days
.
âI don't really fancy a two-hour round-trip,' I said. Simon grunted in agreement.
âKim,' I said, âcan you put the guy in the cage for now? I'm going to try and find out what we need to do with him.'
Kim lead our prisoner to the van's back doors, as Simon took the bike and put it in the middle section. I reached for my radio.
âIs there a duty skipper available?' I asked.
âUnit calling for duty skipper,' replied the CAD operator. âPlease call up Mike Delta eight-eight.'
âReceived,' I transmitted. âEight-eight receiving five-nine-two'.
âEight-eight receiving, go ahead.'
âSpare please.'
âChanging,' the sergeant replied. I changed my radio to the spare channel.
âMike Delta five-nine-two receiving.'
âHi skip, I'm here. We've just arrested a suspected bike thief, but he claims the bike is his.'
âYeah?'
âWell, I was just wondering if it would be okay to take him to the bike shop and see if we can square things up there; I don't really fancy a trip to Essex.'
âThe clock's running, Matt,' the sergeant said, his voice garbled with exhaustion.
Someone later told me that this particular sergeant had recently finished an 18-hour shift, had six hours' sleep, and gone straight in for another 14 hours. Some of the skippers were completely unstoppable; bloody superheroes, the lot of them. The clock he was referring to is the force target of getting prisoners to custody within an hour of arrest.
âBut yeah, knock yourself out,' he added. âKeep me posted.'
âThanks, sarge,' I said.
âOut,' he replied, and vanished from the spare channel.
I walked to the back of the police van.
âWhat's your name, mate?' I said.
âIt's Case Jacobs,' he said.
âCase?' I replied. âUnusual name, where's that from?'
âIt's spelled K-E-E-S,' he said. âI'm from Belgium.'
âNice to meet you, Kees,' I said. âNormally, we'd have taken you straight to a police station, but I propose we go talk to the bicycle shop owner first. Is that okay by you?'
âOf course,' he said.
âGood,' I said, closing the back doors on the caged Transit van, before throwing the keys to the Astra to Kim and climbing into the van through the side door.
Simon and Kim drove the vehicles to the bike shop, whilst I had a quick chat with Kees in the back of the Transit van.
âSo, what happened, then?'
âI went into the bike shop to buy a new lock, as my last one was cut in half by the thieves, and I saw my bike there! I told the shop owner, but he said it wasn't my bike and that I couldn't have it back. So I took it.'
âHow can you know it's your bike?' I asked.
âLook at it!' he laughed. âHave you ever seen a bike like that? I fixed it up myself. There's no way that's not my bike. I changed the seat, and I can tell you every detail of every part of that bike.'
Then began a monologue about the various bits and pieces he had used to make it âthe perfect bike'.
âIt has Shimano XTR components all around, even the chain,' he said, âbut I blasted off the markings so thieves wouldn't see them,' he said.
I took a closer look at the bike; true enough, every part was gleaming from having been sandblasted, and no markings were visible anywhere.
âThat puts us in a bit of a weird situation, though,' I said. âYou say you've done it so thieves won't know that the bike is valuable, right?'
Kees replied with a nod.
âBut that's a pretty common thing for thieves to do as well, so owners won't recognise their own bikes â¦'
We arrived at the bike shop.
âHang on here for a second,' I told Kees. âI'm just going to have a chat with the owner.' I turned to Kim, who'd just finished calling in an update about our situation. âWanna keep our friend company?' I asked.
âYeah, sure,' she said, and walked to the back of the van, opening one of the doors to give our prisoner some fresh air.
I walked into the bike shop. The owner was there, looking none too pleased.
âTook you fucking long enough,' he said.
âTrue,' I said. âBut we caught the guy.'
The shopkeeper did a double take, then leaned forward and looked at the van. He couldn't see into it.
âSeriously?'
âYeah, we spotted him as he was cycling along, so we stopped him.'
âWow, that's great!'
âOne little thing, though: he says the bike is his.'
âYeah, he told me the same,' the shopkeeper said. âBut no ⦠no way. Some kid brought it in the other day to get a flat tyre fixed.'
âIn your opinion,' I said, âis that a valuable bike?'
âIt's a funny one, actually,' the shopkeeper said. âIt's a pretty standard Cannondale. They're popular bikes, but it's a mid-range bike, not usually particularly expensive. This particular one has had just about every component upgraded, though â high-end everything.'
âDid you do the upgrades for him?' I asked.
âNope,' he replied. âI've never seen the bike before.'
âIs it hard to replace a flat tyre?' I asked.
âNo! Not at all.'
âIt seems to me that this bike would have been owned by a bike lover, wouldn't you say?'
âYeah, definitely. It came in super-clean. Seems as if the kid really loved his bike, definitely kept it in pristine condition.'
âSo, forgive me if I'm asking a silly question â if someone is a huge bike fan, wouldn't they just replace their own inner tubes?' I asked.
âYeah, I suppose so. But people are weird, y'know,' he shrugged.
âI don't suppose you have CCTV, do you?'
âAre you joking? We're CCTV'd to the rafters. I've got several bikes in here that are worth thousands and thousands of pounds; no way would I not have CCTV,' he said. âIn fact, I already took a look at the footage of the guy who brought the bike in, and of the fellow who nicked it.'
âCan I have a look?' I asked.
âSure,' he replied, and waved me to the back of the shop.
It took me all of six seconds of the first video to recognise the lad who had brought the bike in for repair.
âI've got some bad news for you,' I said. âThat's Tommy, he's a drug addict and a notorious bike thief around here.'
âSeriously?' the owner said. âI've seen him around the shop several times. He's never stolen anything,' he added, before pausing for several seconds. âI don't think â¦'
âIt doesn't mean anything,' I added. âI haven't heard of him getting nicked for a good while, perhaps he's taken the straight and narrow â¦'
The shop owner shrugged and queued up the next video.
âHere you go,' he said. âThe guy had a funny accent. German or something. He came in to buy a lock, but then he spotted the bike â¦'
The video didn't have sound, but it was unusually clear for CCTV. Surprisingly so, in fact. A lot of the CCTV footage we see is utterly useless, and some of it looks like it has been scrambled to hell and back, as if the entire file has been run through the blocking-out filter they apply to genitalia in Japanese pornography. Not that I would know what that looks like, of course.
In the video, I could clearly see Kees getting more and more aggravated. At one point, he simply takes the bike out of the rack, rips off a label that was zip-tied to the seat and starts pushing the bike towards the doors. The shop owner quickly blocks his way, but Kees runs his bike into the owner, before taking a swing at him with the lock he is holding in his hand.
âStop there for a moment,' I said, and took a closer look at the shopkeeper. âDid he hit you with the lock?' I asked him, looking at his face carefully.
âYeah. He didn't hit me properly, though. That would have hurt,' he replied, as he lifted his hand to his face, rubbing his chin.
âYour eye still looks a bit swollen,' I said, thoughtfully.
âYeah, well, I've had worse,' the shopkeeper said grimly. I looked at him, waiting for the rest of the story.
âRugby,' he said, and grinned.
I smiled back.
âHah, yeah, that makes sense,' I said. âWould you excuse me for a moment?'
I went back to the van.
âKees, do you have any receipts or anything for the bike?' I asked.
âDo you have an iPhone?' he replied.
âWhat for?' I asked, confused.
âI love my bike,' he replied, âand I've kept a blog of all the work I've done on it. The website I keep for my bike has all the receipts on it as well,' he said.
âWell, damn â¦' I said.
âI've run the bike through the box,' Kim said. âIt was reported stolen six days ago, by Kees here, and the serial number of the bike matches up with the police report. Also, when he filed his report, he showed the original purchase receipt of the bike, which matched the serial number as well.'
âOh,' said Kees, âand if you still doubt it, take the seat stem out of the bike'.
I walked around to the bike, unlocked the quick-release clasp, and took the seat off the bike. It looked pretty normal to me.
âWhat am I looking for here?' I asked.
âLook inside,' Kees said.
I felt around the bottom of the seat stem with my finger, and found something. I took it out and took a look. It was a piece of laminated paper that read: âProperty of Kees Jacobs', with a telephone number.
âIt's a normal thing to do in Belgium,' Kees said, with a shrug.
âHang on a sec,' I said, and went back to the bike shop.
âI'm starting to believe that the bike belongs to the “thief”,' I told the shopkeeper. âHe reported it stolen six days ago. When did the lad drop it off to have the tyre fixed?'
The shopkeeper picked up the piece of paper that Kees had torn off the bike, and read it.
âSix days ago,' he said.
âSo it seems as if someone stole the bike whilst the riots were raging, and Tommy dropped it off at your shop to get the tyre fixed soon after,' I said.
âWell ⦠Fuck,' the proprietor contributed, summarising the culmination of our predicament perfectly.
âYeah,' I agreed.
âWe'll take the bike to the station, as it's stolen property. The owner can come and claim it when they produce their receipt,' I said.
âI bloody hate bike thieves,' he said.
âYeah, I imagine you must do,' I replied. I paused, and looked at the shopkeeper for a few moments. His eye had swollen even further. The words âCrikey, that's gonna hurt in the mornin', son' from that annoying Fosters advert echoed around in my head.
âThat leaves only one thing,' I said. âThe bike owner assaulted you. We have all the evidence we need to prosecute him, I think. All we need is your video footage, and a statement â¦'
âAh,' the shopkeeper said, rubbing the side of his head. âYou're positive he's not a bike thief?'
âYou can never be sure,' I said. âBut he does seem to have all the receipts to back up his claims. He bought most of the parts off eBay and put the whole bike together himself. He showed me a blog of the work in progress; it looks like it all checks out.'
âCan I talk to him?' he asked.
I hesitated.
âNot really, to be honest. If we're going to charge him, we need to interview him at the police station.'
âCan I go stand by your van and just think out loud for a bit, then?' he asked, with a conspiratory smile on his face.
âDo you have a bathroom?' I asked.
âI do,' he said, pointing with his thumb towards a door in the corner of his workshop.
âI'm going to go use the loo, then, if you don't mind. What you do whilst I'm gone is up to you, really,' I said, and walked to the bathroom.
When I came back out, the shopkeeper was standing next to the van, laughing with Kim.
Kim came up to me.
âThe shopkeeper is refusing to make a statement about the assault, and says that he may have “accidentally” deleted the footage of it,' she said. âWhat should we do?'
âWell, if there's no evidence of an assault, no allegations of any sort â¦' I said, adding: âObviously, Kees can't have stolen his own bike.'
Kim let our suspect out of the caged van but kept him in handcuffs.
âSo, just to confirm, I've written here: “I, Dan Smith, proprietor of the Bike Shack on seventy-three Main Street, confirm that I do not allege any crimes in connection with my 999 call. CAD eight-seven-four-nine refers”. If that sounds accurate, all you need to do is to sign here, and we'll be out of your hair,' I said.
âYeah, no worries. Turns out Kees and I have friends in common, and to be honest, I'd punch anyone who got in the way of stealing my pride and joy as well,' he said, laughing.