APP GRATIS

Another thief caught on camera stealing batteries from electric motorcycles in Havana

The man was wearing gloves and a mask and was recorded in the parking lot on I Street, between 15 and 17 in Vedado. In the recording he is seen making a sign with one hand


The cameras continue to record thieves inCuba. It happened this week in the parking lot ofI, between 15 and 17, in Vedado (Havana). An alleged criminal had stolen "some electric motorcycle chargers" and the video surveillance camera captured the moment he approached to see if anyone was coming.

The images have been shared by Orlando Medina in the Facebook group El Vedado Hoy, ensuring that the complaint had already been filed with the Police.

In the video, the voices of women chatting can be heard in the background, while the thief, wearing gloves and a mask, approaches the door and looks inside. He then turns around and at that moment makes a denial gesture with his left hand, which could indicate that he was not alone or that he was talking to himself.

In the few seconds of recording you can see the man, very tall, with torn pants, a flowered shirt and a cap, sneaking up to see if there was anyone who could go out to the parking lot at that moment. Then he walks away from a door with bars, trying not to make noise.

In the midst of the shortage that Cuba is experiencing, the wave of thefts has mobilized residents. Last day the 17th,Residents in Mantilla, Arroyo Naranjo, arrested a thief inside a home when he was trying to steal and tied him up to immobilize him until the arrival of the Police. The offender was identified as a 20-year-old young man residing in that same neighborhood. Shortly before being surprised in fragrant, They had already seen him hanging around the area. He pretended to sell seasoning and potatoes.

At the end of March, an angry crowd almost lynched a thief from the Chicharrones district, in Santiago de Cuba, when he tried to assault a woman who was leaving the La Colonia pediatric hospital with her son in the provincial capital.

Although several police patrols traveled to the scene of the incident, the neighbors did not let the agents act because they wanted to take the law into their own hands. The PNR had to ask for reinforcements and a commando of black berets with long weapons approached the area.

Also in Santiago de Cuba, but in the Santa Bárbara neighborhood, neighbors detained an alleged bicycle thief, on whom they managed to place handcuffs until the Police arrived and proceeded to arrest him.The young man was on parole and tried to steal a bicycle from the house of a UNPACU activist.

In Santiago de Cuba, residents also captured another alleged thief who stole a cell phone. to a teenager who was at the door of his house and kept him immobilized until the police arrived.

In the video that emerged, the thief's state of anxiety can be seen, as well as what appeared to be a blow to one of his eyes, which looked closed. Followers of the independent journalist Yosmany Mayeta Labrada identified the alleged criminal under the name of Rufino.

This week a thief was caught on camera, after eleven at night, in the Escambray neighborhood, in the capital of the province of Villa Clara. The events were reported in the Facebook group Revolico Santa Clara, where the user Humberto Ortega offers a reward to anyone who identifies the young man who, he claims, stole two tools: a drill and an electric rotary hammer called a chipijama.

Although the regime denies that there is an increase in violence in the country, crime has gained ground in Cuba. The same day that the images of the thief in Santa Clara were recorded,A 16-year-old teenager was assaulted and hit in the abdomen with a machete, at two in the afternoon, in El Cerro (Havana), to take away the backpack in which he carried a water bottle and the supply book. When the family came to file a complaint, the Police verbally abused them and even threatened the mother and father of the victim with filing a report against them.

What do you think?

COMMENT

Filed in:


Do you have something to report?
Write to CiberCuba:

editores@cibercuba.com

 +1 786 3965 689