Malta Independent

Young car thief charged on 35 separate counts

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A 17-year old has been released on bail after pleading not guilty to joyriding and 34 other charges in a crime likened to video game Grand Theft Auto.

The youngster from Marsa, whose name was banned from publicatio­n by the court, was arrested on Tuesday after crashing.

A traffic policeman had been flagged down by a motorist whose car had been hit by the errant driver.

The man was standing next to a badly damaged car that had apparently just come to a halt after hitting a wall, said Inspector Pierreguid­o Saliba. Behind the wheel the badly damaged car was the young man who was being prevented from getting out by the irate other driver. One source described the events as “like a Grand Theft Auto game.”

The youth pleaded not guilty to 35 charges relating to four separate episodes of car theft, all of which led to hit-and-run crashes. The incidents took place over the past ten days, with the last three incidents happening once a day.

The accused was also charged with damaging third party property, breaching a recently issued Probation Order, as well as committing the alleged offences while under a conditiona­l discharge he had been handed in February.

He had admitted to the police that he had been driving a stolen vehicle, the court was told.

Police investigat­ions had linked the same youth to another three car thefts in which the stolen vehicle was left abandoned and beyond repair after crashing.

Defence lawyer Victor Bugeja told the magistrate that the youth was ‘a social case,’ approachin­g the bench to discuss the man’s social and medical problems out of earshot of the public.

A social enquiry report was ordered to be drawn up to assess the underage accused’s home situation.

The prosecutio­n did not object to bail, as long as tough conditions and supervisio­n were imposed.

The Court upheld the request for the youth’s release from arrest, ordering him to sign a bail book four times a week and observe a curfew, against a personal guarantee of €2,000. He was also placed under a temporary supervisio­n order.

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