ROK Drop

By GI Korea on March 21st, 2009 at 3:02 pm

Bike Registration Controversy at Yongsan Garrison

» by GI Korea in: USFK

Here is another one of those only in Korea stories:

A new bike registration policy is in the works at Yongsan Garrison to make it easier for owners to report missing property and for military police to determine which bicycles have been abandoned.

Garrison commander Col. Dave Hall said the long-planned policy was spurred by events surrounding a mid-February bike roundup by military police at the Burke Towers housing area, which led to several bikes being unaccounted for.

According to Burke Towers resident and former building manager Lt. Col. Kristopher Perry, the trouble started Feb. 6, when he saw military police and a garrison housing office representative putting orange stickers on bikes at a bike rack in front of his building.

The stickers warned owners that the bikes were suspected of being abandoned and that if they didn’t contact MPs within three days, the bikes would be confiscated.

Perry said he asked if residents would be informed this was happening, and the MP assured him they would.

The notification never happened.

“We didn’t do the job right notifying the tenants,” Hall said. “The spirit and the intent was good, but the execution went astray.”

A second Burke Towers resident, who asked not to be named, said he saw an MP at about 12:30 a.m. Feb. 11 cutting locks and loading bikes onto the back of a flatbed truck.

When the resident confronted the MP, he was told he’d been ordered to round up the bikes.

Hall said there was nothing suspicious about the late hour in which MPs conducted the roundup and that such operations normally take place during periods of less traffic on post.

“Was there malicious intent? I’m confident there was not,” Hall said.

The resident checked outside later that night and found the bike rack empty and the MP and his truck gone.

He later found out that four of his family’s bikes were among those that disappeared that night. A bike belonging to Perry’s son also went missing.

When Perry’s wife went to military police to reclaim her son’s bike, Perry said, she was shown to the impound where the confiscated bikes were stored, but found only eight “dilapidated” bikes, none of which belonged to her son.

When she told the MPs her son’s bike was not there, Perry said, the MPs claimed to have confiscated only eight bikes.

MPs said the bike must have been stolen, Perry said, and the family could file a report “but nothing would come of it.” Later he was told he had no recourse because the bike hadn’t been registered in the computer database used to keep track of the vehicles on post.

Perry and the second resident say more than eight bikes were confiscated.

Perry provided Stars and Stripes with an e-mail from the housing office representative who accompanied military police as they tagged bikes, who estimated at least 12 bikes in the rack at the time.

Perry became more suspicious when he noticed none of the bike racks near the other Burke Towers buildings had been emptied, and a sign on one of them promised cash for bikes.

A call to the phone number on the sign was answered by a recorded message saying it had been suspended.

Garrison spokesman Steve Morgan said bike registration has never been mandatory, but has been available at Yongsan for several years. He said he doesn’t believe its availability has ever been publicized.

Morgan, who said housing officials and military police did not want to be interviewed on the matter, issued a statement via e-mail Wednesday.

It said military police tagged and confiscated eight bikes in accordance with an Army regulation that allows MPs to confiscate abandoned property.

“Unfortunately, this regulation does not take into consideration the special circumstance of an ‘abandoned bicycle,’ e.g., in the winter time bikes are chained up and all but forgotten,” the statement said.

It added that under the new bike registration program being developed, owners will receive a decal to display on their bikes “that will make it easier for the MPs to identify which bikes are abandoned and give owners a way of identifying their bikes.”

Hall said the program will help prevent similar problems in the future.

“Without it, people will abandon bikes,” he said. “Which is how this happened to begin with.”  [Stars & Stripes]

Yes abandoned bicycles are a problem in USFK due to the continuous change over of personnel, but just taking all these bikes without making an attempt to notify the people that live in the apartment is just boneheaded.

Any bets on where the missing bikes currently are?  My guess is that people working at the MP station took them because the were good bikes they thought were abandoned.

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  • theotherguy
    1:14 am on March 23rd, 2009 1

    Yep this sounds exactly like how they’d do it. Good intentions (get rid of the old rusty bikes that are there for over a year), but very very bad execution (not warning people, or telling people to get bikes registered to prevent it from happening).

    Reply

  • Unsatisfied LG DACOM Victim No Longer Victimized By LG DACOM (Once Again a KT Customer)
    6:22 am on March 23rd, 2009 2

    I wish that they would handle stray cats the same way, thus ridding the installation of all cats, stray or otherwise. All cats rounded up and euthanized without notice.

    Reply

  • JAFO
    8:23 am on March 23rd, 2009 3

    Isn’t it just a little bit of bad judgment to check for “abandoned” bikes right at the end of 6 months of cold weather when most bikes have been all-but-forgotten about?

    Wouldn’t it be better to do it after several weeks of warm weather when there would be a better chance to see which bikes are truly abandoned and the owners have a better chance to see warning stickers?

    That working-at-night thing sounds a little shifty, too. It’s the kind of thing you do when you don’t want to be seen removing bikes.

    I can’t believe anyone would risk their careers over a few hundred dollars in used bikes so I have to blame stupidity instead of criminality.

    Maybe there were ulterior motives we are not destined to understand. That’s par for the USFK course these days.

    Reply

  • GI Korea
    12:58 pm on March 23rd, 2009 4

    JAFO, I agree that it sounds more like stupidity involved here to me then anyone trying to do something illegal. It still doesn’t make it right and hopefully everyone involved in this mess are held accountable.

    Reply

  • guitard
    3:44 pm on March 23rd, 2009 5

    When Perry’s wife went to military police to reclaim her son’s bike, Perry said, she was shown to the impound where the confiscated bikes were stored, but found only eight “dilapidated” bikes, none of which belonged to her son.

    My question: Where are the bikes they removed? Presumably Perry’s wife went down to the MP station shortly after the bike was taken. Why wasn’t it in the impound lot?

    Reply

  • Ed
    3:46 pm on March 26th, 2009 6

    Seems like it started out legit, then a little bit of liberty was taken executing the order.

    Reply

  • ChickenHead
    3:10 pm on March 27th, 2009 7

    So…

    The only two remaining mysteries are…

    Where are the bikes…

    …and where is the follow-up story?

    Reply

  • Leon LaPorte
    9:34 pm on March 27th, 2009 8

    The bikes, I’m sure, are looooong gone by now, little buddy.

    As for the follow up? It happens on rare occasion but more often than not, constant reader is left hanging. Even when there is a follow up there is no comment or more lie, lie, lie, deny, deny deny – like AAFES and gas prices. Dispite all the stories on those, they got smart and clammed up after the 5th or so conflicting (and lame) excuse. USFK has been a good study.

    Reply

 

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