https://www.idsnews.com/article/2019/10/florida-man-accused-of-cutting-brake-lines-on-140-electric-scooters-gave-no-motive-cops-say
Florida man accused of cutting brake lines on 140 electric scooters gave no
motive, cops say
Oct 3, 2019  

[image  
https://snworksceo.imgix.net/ids/d4bce468-07c4-44bd-8a93-fdd8302772f3.sized-1000x1000.jpg
 captured video evidence 
]

Randall Thomas Williams, 59, of Fort Lauderdale, Florida, is facing criminal
mischief charges for allegedly cutting the brake lines on electric scooters
around the city. He was caught in the act and on surveillance video provided
by Fort Lauderdale police on YouTube. Tribune News Service Buy Photos

By Wayne K. Roustan and Tonya Alanez
Sun Sentinel

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. — A 59-year-old man who police say was caught in the
act of vandalizing electric scooters — slicing the brake lines on as many as
140 — offered no motive during his arrest, a Fort Lauderdale police report
said.

He also requested a lawyer and said he "did not want to dig himself into a
grave," police said.

During the dark predawn hours, Randall Thomas Williams would set out with a
single glove, wire cutters and pliers and, while sticking to the shadows and
alleyways of his Las Olas neighborhood, search for the controversial, yet
popular, rental scooters that have swarmed the city for nearly a year,
police said.

He's been doing it since at least May, police said, and has vandalized at
least 140 e-scooters in the same fashion, most within a two-block radius of
Williams' apartment at the corner of Southeast First Street and Southeast
12th Avenue between Broward and Las Olas boulevards.

Police aren't sure whether anyone has been hurt as a result of a vandalized
scooter.

The one-year permits granted to e-scooter companies Lime, Bird and Bolt
during the city's pilot program will expire this month and a thorough
discussion about the future of e-scooters in the city is overdue, City
Commissioner Steve Glassman said.

The scooters have been wildly popular with rides nearing the 1 million mark
for the year, he said, and this arrest will add to the conversation.

"Safety, regulations, enforcement, how many, how fast, all of this is going
to be on the table," said Glassman, who represents Fort Lauderdale beach.

Electric scooters can reach speeds of 15 to 17 mph and have resulted in more
than 70 accidents, including 57 hospital visits and one death between
December and April, according to Fort Lauderdale Fire Rescue.

"As far as injuries go, we are not able to determine if scooter crashes that
previously occurred were due to scooters that had been tampered with," said
Casey Liening, a spokeswoman for the Fort Lauderdale Police Department.

Before Williams' arrest early Sunday on a felony charge of criminal mischief
and misdemeanor counts of prowling and resisting arrest, police followed him
and witnessed him in the act, they say.

They already had surveillance video recorded at about 3:47 a.m. Sept. 22
showing Williams tampering with the handlebars and wheels of two scooters.

On Saturday, as police watched, Williams went out around 4 a.m. and
stealthily sliced the cables on seven scooters. On Sunday, they watched him
do the same to nine more, according to a police report.

Despite two voicemail messages and a visit to his home, Williams could not
be reached for comment. Online court records did not identify a defense
lawyer.

"My friend does not want to talk to you, period," a man who called and
identified himself as Chris Marlowe shouted at a reporter late Tuesday
afternoon.

A neighbor said Williams rides a bike, doesn't own a car and had been seen
fewer than a dozen times in the 1 year the neighbor had lived there.

"He's a recluse. He hardly ever comes out," said the neighbor, who declined
to be named. "I don't even know his name."

A representative from Lime was in the neighborhood asking questions a couple
months ago and left a business card, the neighbor said.

A police report shows that it was two local Lime employees who alerted
police to the vandalism of their scooters.

Bolt and Bird also were affected, a police report said, but neither of those
companies responded to requests for comment for this article.

"Lime takes vandalism seriously and we are thankful that FLPD was able to
apprehend a suspect in this case," a spokeswoman for the company said
Tuesday in an emailed statement. "Lime will pursue appropriate legal action
against those that damage or vandalize our property."

During the investigation, the scooter vendors remotely deactivated all of
their e-scooters in the area to reduce risk to riders.

It costs $200 to repair each scooter, police said. The loss of revenue that
140 scooters would have generated since April is still being calculated.

Police had their sights on Williams as a suspect since July, police reports
show.

After reporting repeated vandalized scooters, the local Lime employees
reached out to a business with a video camera set up for surveillance and
asked to park some scooters there. It was around the corner from Williams'
apartment.

It didn't take long to obtain video evidence showing an older man with
clippers crouching next to two scooters, which were later inspected and
found with cut brake cables.

They took a screenshot of the man in the video, and showed it around the
neighborhood until someone recognized him, a police report said.

When police officers closed in on Williams early Sunday morning and a patrol
car with flashing lights pulled up, Williams balled his fists, braced,
tensed, pull away from officers and refused to let go of the objects in his
hands, the report said.

Upon arrest, Williams wore one glove and carried two sets of wire cutters
and a pair of pliers.

He was booked into the Broward Main Jail at 6:16 a.m. Sunday and was
released more than 21 hours later after posting $500 bond, records show.

It is not known if Williams will face more charges, but the police
investigation continues.

Investigators urge anyone who sees someone tampering with electric scooters
to call 911 immediately. Anyone who finds a scooter that appears to have
been tampered with should contact the vendor listed on the scooter.
[© idsnews.com]


+
http://www.publicsectorexecutive.com/Robot-News/rotherham-council-offers-free-electric-charging-
Rotherham Council offers free electric charging
30.09.19 ... to attract new users of electric vehicles and early users of
charging points, Rotherham Council are making electric vehicle charging
available for free ...
http://www.publicsectorexecutive.com/write/MediaUploads/E_charging_3.jpg
...
https://www.rotherham.gov.uk/info/100011/transport_and_streets/1355/electric_vehicle_charging_points




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