I still occasionally misplace my important items, so I understand some of the pain. I've gotten lost keys, wallets, cell phones, back to their owners, sometimes through amazing luck and sometimes through detective work. One item I recently came across was a pretty nice looking bike helmet in the bike lane of Damen Ave, right across from Wicker Park. It was during a race, the sadie hawkins "style" ride, and I thought, hey this helmet is damaged, but just a bit, maybe one of the racers lost it, lets take it to the after party and make an announcement just in case.
But then how to identify the owner? I can't expect someone to have a sales receipt, not to mention ON them at the party. Some Sadie people made an announcement, no one claimed it, and they left with the helmet.
So I'd like to mention a grey/silver Giro racing helmet, found the day of the sadie ride, Nov. 20th 2010. I found your helmet maybe, and in the future I'm wondering if I was able to find you, by chainlink or craigslist or by some kind of other word of mouth, how would I be able to assure myself it was really you? I've thought of them all I think:
Sales receipt, or indication from a vendor that the product was bought by the person claiming it.
Able to describe unique markings on the helmet (stickers, cuts, hidden markers placed there just for such an eventuality)
Hold back some data, like where it was found, or the make and model, or the color, and ask the person claiming it to fill in the blanks.
Rely on the word of someone else, like their friend, and take their assurances and rate based on my own subjective take.
Try and hold out for a photo of the person with the lost item.
Do some or all the above and photograph the person who gets the claimed items, with the claimed items, with their ID, so that they take a risk in the claim and I can still offer some kind of support if somebody later turns out to have a better or more convincing claim.
Also: the method and such vary according to the item, a lost bike, a lost helmet, a lost glove, a lost scarf or other bike specific gear. I've found one arctic glove right by the bike rack, I've found descent toe warmers that help with clipless shoes. I have every reason to believe I can advertise and quickly find an owner, but how I actually will rate this person's claim leaves me with another urge to just leave anything but the easy stuff right where I find it. But I'm hoping I can get past that and of course the law which says I should only turn it in immediately to the local police station. I find that if I take that law at face value, I will probably just leave the item since following the law seems more troublesome, and hardly likely to reunite an owner with a lost item.
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I'd have to say you are overthinking this to death. If someone is going to go through the trouble of claiming a helmet that has been stunk up and sweated in by someone else let them have it and a case of lice. Unless you have someones house keys, walet, cell phone or something of similar value weather valued monitarily, privacy wise or something of the like let the item go to the person that claimed it and karma will take care of the rest.
I can tell you have the best intentions but I'd be damned pissed if I lost something and had to jump through 50 hoops created by the random person trying to help reunite me with my lost or misplaced stuff. I might be inclined to punch someone in the face instead of bringing a friend, a picture, a receipt and blood sample to claim a helmet, glove or shoe covers. The important stuff like keys, wallets, phones, or other valuable personal items should be very easy to match with the right person with a question or two instead of tribunal on the street corner.
Perhaps you are "underthinking" since I just posted this and already, a matter of a short time later, you have formed a sort of critique of my thinking itself :) and then you posted it in public :). I'm going to just ignore your message for the most part, sorry. This subject of where you would punch somebody even, is against the rules of the chainlink and is completely unwelcome in this thread I just started. I can't verify your good intentions here, and I'd be glad to see you delete your whole message since its kind of problematic.
As to the straw man of "50 hoops" I don't see your reference. I am reaching for some kind of assurance I never claimed it would be easy :)
As to karma - I don't believe much
I am that random person, if you cannot see the logic I present, I cannot necessarily explain it to you. See above.
I am not afraid of getting punched in the face, which brings me to wonder who are you Sean Gaskin? Why would you admit to using violence to solve such a situation? Why would you archive it on the chainlink? Are you a real person whose name is Sean Gaskin?
Sean Gaskin said:
I'd have to say you are overthinking this to death. If someone is going to go through the trouble of claiming a helmet that has been stunk up and sweated in by someone else let them have it and a case of lice. Unless you have someones house keys, walet, cell phone or something of similar value weather valued monitarily, privacy wise or something of the like let the item go to the person that claimed it and karma will take care of the rest.
I can tell you have the best intentions but I'd be damned pissed if I lost something and had to jump through 50 hoops created by the random person trying to help reunite me with my lost or misplaced stuff. I might be inclined to punch someone in the face instead of bringing a friend, a picture, a receipt and blood sample to claim a helmet, glove or shoe covers. The important stuff like keys, wallets, phones, or other valuable personal items should be very easy to match with the right person with a question or two instead of tribunal on the street corner.
I'm going to have to stick with my original statement that you're over thinking this to death.
Since my sarcasm has failed to be recognized let me break it down for you. I am not going to punch you or anyone else in the face nor have I. So there goes any admission of my alleged assault.My statement was simply a way to express that I'd be frustrated as hell if I ever needed to try to claim a lost item from you. Your interpretation of this so literally just reinforces my opinion that you're over thinking this to the point of possibly not even being helpful to the person you're trying to help.
I'm afraid you can't see the forest for the trees. Try to do good and be happy with that. With the approach you're taking I'd put odds on collecting something from the lost and found at the Kremlin as being a more enjoyable experience than asking you to return a pair of dropped gloves.
Yes, if it was sarcastic, this punching of faces statement, yes I completely failed to interpret it as such. Thanks for the clarification on that. I can say in the future you might avoid such, and at least with me, I find it would get in the way of this thread I am undertaking, I think you can see this. What you typed up there is still a crime, its called assault in my understanding and I invite you to look into the law on this with someone who knows more than I.
Sean Gaskin said:
I'm going to have to stick with my original statement that you're over thinking this to death.
Since my sarcasm has failed to be recognized let me break it down for you. I am not going to punch you or anyone else in the face nor have I. So there goes any admission of my alleged assault.My statement was simply a way to express that I'd be frustrated as hell if I ever needed to try to claim a lost item from you. Your interpretation of this so literally just reinforces my opinion that you're over thinking this to the point of possibly not even being helpful to the person you're trying to help.
I'm afraid you can't see the forest for the trees. Try to do good and be happy with that. With the approach you're taking I'd put odds on collecting something from the lost and found at the Kremlin as being a more enjoyable experience than asking you to return a pair of dropped gloves.
I'm going to have to stick with my original statement that you're over thinking this to death.
My statement was simply a way to express that I'd be frustrated as hell if I ever needed to try to claim a lost item from you. Your interpretation of this so literally just reinforces my opinion that you're over thinking this to the point of possibly not even being helpful to the person you're trying to help.
But let me paint a picture. If somebody used the words that Sean used, in sarcasm or not, if I have to hear about a "blood sample" a completely made up straw man case that I never indicated, then I would be telling you over the phone or email that I will not be attempting to return your item to you. I will be turning them over to the police. If you are acting all high and mighty and wise, telling me about karma and try and do good and be happy with that, fine, but you will not be seeing me do anything but turning over the item to the police. I reserve the right to not even tell you which station I drop it off at. I reserve the right to block all communications from you of any kind. Compare this situation to the Kremlin lost and found department to your hearts content, I won't be caring much about it.
I'm afraid you can't see the forest for the trees. Try to do good and be happy with that. With the approach you're taking I'd put odds on collecting something from the lost and found at the Kremlin as being a more enjoyable experience than asking you to return a pair of dropped gloves.
Wow...it's great that you want to return lost items, but it really shouldn't be so complex. If an item doesn't have a lot of resale value, there really shouldn't be any verification. It would be a rare person who would claim a glove or helmet that didn't belong to them.
If an item is valuable or it's something that anyone would want, then go ahead and ask for a description. It shouldn't be that hard.
As for purchasing a stolen bike with the idea of reunited it with the owner....it's completely unnecessary. If you are able to prove that a bike has been stolen, you don't need to buy it. You can call the police and they will confiscate it and arrest whoever is selling it for being in possession of stolen property. If you purchase that bike and reward the seller, then you are showing that stealing bikes and reselling them is profitable, which sets the stage for more stolen bikes. Please do not contribute to demand for stolen bikes.
There's something almost magical about the chainlink's ability to generate a heated argument out of even the most innocuous posting.
On your question, my two cents is that for anything smaller than a bike itself, if somebody says it's theirs, just accept their word for it. It's reasonable to ask basic identifying questions (what sticker was on the helmet?), but asking for receipts, photos or taking their picture to identify them later is a bit over the top. That's especially true if you announce the find in a limited setting such as the Sadie after-party or even the Chainlink (which is big, but is nothing compared to,say, CraigsList).
For a bike, I might ask for a bit more, and that increases as the cost of the bike increases. Somebody might not have any way to prove that the 20-year-old Schwinn is theirs, so let it go, but I assume somebody with an expensive carbon road bike has something that can prove ownership.
Tribunal on the street corner -pure gold! That line made my whole day.
I'm imagining a bunch of guys with long beards Taliban-style and the threat of stoning U-locking to death anyone who made false claims/bore false witness to their fellow cyclist.
Implement sharia veloistic law amongst the faithful NOW!
Sean Gaskin said:
The important stuff like keys, wallets, phones, or other valuable personal items should be very easy to match with the right person with a question or two instead of tribunal on the street corner.
Wow...it's great that you want to return lost items, but it really shouldn't be so complex. If an item doesn't have a lot of resale value, there really shouldn't be any verification. It would be a rare person who would claim a glove or helmet that didn't belong to them.
If an item is valuable or it's something that anyone would want, then go ahead and ask for a description. It shouldn't be that hard.
As for purchasing a stolen bike with the idea of reunited it with the owner....it's completely unnecessary. If you are able to prove that a bike has been stolen, you don't need to buy it. You can call the police and they will confiscate it and arrest whoever is selling it for being in possession of stolen property. If you purchase that bike and reward the seller, then you are showing that stealing bikes and reselling them is profitable, which sets the stage for more stolen bikes. Please do not contribute to demand for stolen bikes.
Perhaps its unnecessary, but then I think you have overlooked a subtle point. I am not really of the understanding that I would be adding to demand for stolen bikes if I buy one, nor do I feel that I would be rewarding the seller in many cases. I'm not really interested in the fancy carbon or other high ticket items. The people that own those have their own motivations and actually may be able to prove the bike is stolen.
I'm looking at some old schwinn. And I'm wondering what is its provenance. You say yourself that they (the owner) may have no way to prove its their schwinn, or that it was stolen from them. But to get to that realization I'm willing to take the risk in some cases. I CAN'T prove its stolen, otherwise I would just hand the issue over to the cops.
What I can do is buy the bike at a low price because it comes with no provenance. I can then do a search with the police to see if the bike was reported or registered with them. I can then make a listing at a site like the stolen bike database saying "found". I can then post to craigslist, and perhaps even here, and not just once, but over the process of two weeks I can keep that listing current and updated and give somebody who might not even be looking for their stolen bike a chance to actually dig out a photo of it, or identify some key little scratch in the paint, and make my mind up accordingly. I can hear from a victim years later, and we can get their bike back to them in many cases.
I can also get the info of the dude who sold it to me in many cases, and if the bike turns out to be stolen I can even get that info back to him so he knows what exactly is the process I've started by buying a bike from him or her. People with more money or other buying habits can see this process, this protocol, and can use some insight I have worked on. I might help keep the process clear and less prone to risk, and then they can either act according to it or find their own way and deal with the moral issue as appropriate.
I think its worth mentioning that many who have been in the bike community might find this issue simple and straightforward. Thanks for that, it often is. But as I think I have demonstrated, there are issues which lead to this thread and to tell me I'm overcomplicating things is to basically tell me "I don't understand why you are going to this amount of trouble" and that is fine. I think Sean already touched on the fact that setting up arbitrary hoops for recovery is going to lead to frustration, keeping the process as simple AS POSSIBLE is always going to be the ideal.
As far as somebody claiming something that is not theirs, I have faith that people will NO DOUBT game such a system, I'm just not sure how often or how diligently they will go at it.
Edit: spelling and run-ons
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