Hindustan Times (Patiala)

Snatchers who targeted 100 in six months nabbed

- HT Correspond­ent ■ htreporter­s@hindustant­imes.com

When three men riding a scooter took a sudden U-turn on spotting a police picket in west Delhi’s Mayapuri on Saturday evening, policemen initially suspected the trio wanted to avoid a heavy penalty for riding triple.

Over the next few minutes, however, the team realised that they had stumbled upon a gang of snatchers who had allegedly targeted more than 100 people in the last six months. Seventeen snatched mobile phones stuffed in a bag hidden in the scooter’s storage compartmen­t stood testimony to their criminal past.

By Sunday morning, the snatchers turned out to be a gang that employed a unique and dangerous modus operandi and whose network spread to as far as Bangladesh. Among criminals, this gang had gained notoreity as the “Highway Snatchers”.

“Every morning, two members of this gang would leave their homes in Jahangirpu­ri on a stolen Yamaha R15 motorcycle. Riding on the Outer Ring Road, they would look out for motorcycle riders who keep their mobile phones in their shirt pockets for easy access,” said an officer.

“They would then ride parallel to the motorcycli­st for a while before snatching their phone and speeding away. Their sports motorcycle ensured no one stood a chance at catching them. On the Outer Ring road, they were active in places such as Jahangirpu­ri, Burari, Kashmere Gate, Adarsh Nagar, Bhalswa Nagar,” the officer said.

On days when the Outer Ring Road would be heavy with traffic, they would allegedly use a stolen scooter to target phone users in the narrower streets of residentia­l neighbourh­oods in Delhi.

Deepak Purohit, deputy commission­er of police (west district), said, “They would sell the stolen phones in West Bengal from where their contacts would further sell them in Bangladesh.”

“Once they had collected enough snatched phones, they would visit Siliguri in West Bengal and sell the phones there from where they would further be sold to end-users in Bangladesh, making it impossible for us to recover the phones,” said an investigat­or.

The breakthrou­gh for the police came around 5 pm on Saturday when a picket by a “special anti-snatching unit” of Mayapuri police station was set up near Mayapuri Depot.

“We not only had a motorcycle-borne police team at the picket, we also had one more team on motorcycle­s ready in case any suspects took a U-turn. Within seconds, the suspects found themselves sandwiched between two police motorcycle­s. The suspects tried to run on foot, but were chased and caught,” said the officer.

When the police team checked the storage compartmen­t of the scooter, they found 17 phones kept in a bag.

By Sunday morning, the police had recovered four more phones and three more stolen motorcycle­s. DCP Purohit identified the arrested men as 25-year-old Raja, Ashu, 22, and Sheikh Nasir, 22-year-old Raja, who goes by a single name, is the alleged kingpin of the gang that has been into snatching for at least last six months, said the officer. “Raja was released on bail in another snatching case just a month ago,” said the DCP.

The police have so far linked 13 of the 21 recovered phones using their IMEI numbers and efforts are on to identify the owners of the remaining phones.

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