Gangs of thieves target luggage of passengers taking airport buses in Hong Kong
Airline passengers are facing a fresh crime threat – and this time it is not from so-called in-flight steals – but the theft of travel bags and their contents from city-bound airport buses.
Police feared a wave of publicity over mid-air robberies – which saw more than HK$13 million worth of passenger property and cash pilfered from overhead luggage compartments on inbound flights between 2015 and 2016 – may have forced organised gangs to switch their attention to airport buses. The criminals banked on the fact that passengers who landed safely with their property intact would drop their guard.
The new twist in airport-related crime had seen “many, many” passengers fall victim over recent weeks, according to police sources, and prompted fresh warnings to bus commuters travelling to or from the airport to be extra vigilant.
“There have been many, many cases involving travellers who have come off flights landing in Hong Kong and then taken airport buses into the city. Perhaps they feel the threat to their property drops once they are on the ground, but this is now not the case,” the source said.
“The number and nature of such thefts – which would appear to involve a significant number of mainland culprits – suggest it is a very well organised, syndicated crime gang.”
On December 6 last year, one case was reported to police in Eastern district. It involved a 25-year-old woman who reported that her suitcase, with property valued at about HK$4,000, was stolen on a bus she took from the airport on the same day.
An investigation was under way and no one had been arrested, a police spokesman said.
Another case occurred 10 days later on December 16 when a 51-year-old foreign woman went to Central Police Station to report that one of her suitcases, with property totalling HK$5,600 inside, was stolen in a similar fashion.
The Post understands that the robbers target passengers who store their bags in a luggage compartment on the lower level of a double decker bus, and then take a seat upstairs.
Airline passengers are facing a fresh crime threat – and this time it is not from so-called in-flight steals – but the theft of travel bags and their contents from city-bound airport buses.
Police feared a wave of publicity over mid-air robberies – which saw more than HK$13 million worth of passenger property and cash pilfered from overhead luggage compartments on inbound flights between 2015 and 2016 – may have forced organised gangs to switch their attention to airport buses. The criminals banked on the fact that passengers who landed safely with their property intact would drop their guard.
The new twist in airport-related crime had seen “many, many” passengers fall victim over recent weeks, according to police sources, and prompted fresh warnings to bus commuters travelling to or from the airport to be extra vigilant.
“There have been many, many cases involving travellers who have come off flights landing in Hong Kong and then taken airport buses into the city. Perhaps they feel the threat to their property drops once they are on the ground, but this is now not the case,” the source said.
“The number and nature of such thefts – which would appear to involve a significant number of mainland culprits – suggest it is a very well organised, syndicated crime gang.”
On December 6 last year, one case was reported to police in Eastern district. It involved a 25-year-old woman who reported that her suitcase, with property valued at about HK$4,000, was stolen on a bus she took from the airport on the same day.
An investigation was under way and no one had been arrested, a police spokesman said.
Another case occurred 10 days later on December 16 when a 51-year-old foreign woman went to Central Police Station to report that one of her suitcases, with property totalling HK$5,600 inside, was stolen in a similar fashion.
The Post understands that the robbers target passengers who store their bags in a luggage compartment on the lower level of a double decker bus, and then take a seat upstairs.