Friday, June 29, 2012

Nine-year-old boy with gun steals electric car

A gun toting nine-year-old took aim at shocked bystanders before stealing an electric car and embarking on a 30 km/h joyride that ended with him crashing at a roundabout in western Sweden. "It's loaded," the boy screamed as he pointed the weapon toward gobsmacked adults who watched as the 9-year-old tried to break into a car parked near a block of flats in the Gothenburg suburb of Kortedala.

The boy then abandoned his first theft attempt before moving on to another nearby car into which he gained entry before speeding off, nearly running over a gardener who was working in the vicinity. However, the vehicle with which the 9-year-old hoped to flee the scene was a special electric car with a top speed of around 30 kilometres per hour, thus impeding a fast getaway. Concerned motorists subsequently took up a somewhat less-than-high-speed chase after the boy.



"From what I understand, they had a good overview of things and honked their horn so that other cars stopped when he came," Jan Jentzell of Poseidon, the property management firm which owned the car, said. According to Jentzell, the boy continued driving in the stolen car for about ten minutes before crashing at a roundabout. He then hopped out of the car and attempted to escape on foot before being grabbed by an adult who had given chase ahead of the arrival of police.

"It's unbelievable," Jentzell said. "I've never seen anything like it. It's also so tragic ... he's so young." As the boy is too young to face formal criminal charges, the matter, which took place last Tuesday, has been turned over to social services, which will ultimately decide what measures need to be taken. The gun used by the boy to threaten onlookers when he stole the car is believed to have been a airsoft gun.

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

Every time I read an article about this, my heart sinks. It's hard to believe that there may be a decent future when incidences like this are becoming more frequent.

Gareth said...

Anonymous you must be a Daily Mail reader. I think you need to look back into history to see that things were once worse. Have a look at the london newspapers from the 19th century if you need confirmation of that.

Anonymous said...

I would never be a Daily Mail reader. Things have changed a lot in this world since the 19th century. We no longer have debtors prison nor children's workhouses. Life is a lot easier now. It still doesn't excuse the lot of them.

Dunex said...

+1@Gareth
The easy access to news/stories/information (I believe) gives a distorted view of incidents and such. (non-english here, sorry for the language)
A complete access to incidents involving police with a media that knows violence sells does not help either.

Regarding the article
The kid got hold of some sort of airgun (pellet or softair) which was in pieces and the vehicle is one of those golfcarts municipal workers use. (which had been left with the ignition-keys in the lock)

The kid is hyperactive ADHD and the father (single) had warned apartment-company about him and asked for things like "don't leave keys".

Dunex said...

Doh, I forgot to add something a 65+ told me.
When he was young living in the country they had dynamite and fell trees with it, used guns to shot birdsand did a number of things that would create huge headlines if it was today.
Sometimes you just gotta take a step back :)
Hell, me and my friends played with dynamite and flashpowder when we were 13-15.

Gareth said...

@Dunex indeed some of the things I used to get up to back in the seventies would probably make national news now, but back then they were just considered youthful high spirits.

By the way I just loved the idea that the kid "sped away" in the golf cart.