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Orange Line rider punched in the mouth when he asks some teens to stop aggro-blocking the doors with their Bluebikes

Transit Police report they are looking for a teen they say punched a man in the mouth on an Orange Line car at Downtown Crossing around 9 p.m. on Friday after he asked the kid and his pals to stop threatening other passengers and blocking the train's doors with their Bluebikes.

Police say the teen responded by punching the man, 52, in the mouth, busting open his lip.

The teens then fled, police say.

Anybody with info can contact detectives at 617-222-1050.

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Comments

Have been seeing more and more Bluebikes on the T. Could be that some people don't get the concept. There are Bluebikes stations near most T stops, so it's better to return the Bluebike, get on the T, and then pick up another at your destination.

However, I suspect many of the Bluebikes on the T are actually stolen ones, so returning isn't really an option.

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If you have a day, week, or month pass, it surely makes more sense to dock the bike at one station and take out another at the station where you get off the T.

If you have a single-ride, 30-minute trip, taking the bike on the T will almost certainly cause you overtime charges.

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these kids were planning to return them to a designated station?

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Those bikes aren't rented, they're effectively stolen and weren't going to be returned?

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Like yourself, a lot of times when I see a Bluebike near someone lounging, or heaven forbid on the T, I just assume it's been stolen.

I've got to get into the habit of returning wayward Bluebikes to docking stations. I'm not brave enough to do it when people are around, but I'll see them randomly around.

At least once I've seen a Bluebike chained to posts. Mind you, this is within a block of a docking station.

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The sorts of people who hold T doors open and punch people who ask them to move are also the sorts to steal bikes. But maybe I'm wrong to assume.

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Not all thieves are violent, however.

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You could be completely right, if one gets the drift.

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The contractor that moves BlueBikes around by van from full stations to empty stations will sometime triage stations that are likely to fill by chaining up a bunch of the already locked-in bikes to a nearby post and wait for the van to arrive to load them in.

They do this at the rack outside the Fenway commuter rail station all the time on game days.

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If they're on an income-restricted plan, they get 60 minutes free per trip. They can then sign up for the Bike Angels program ( https://www.bluebikes.com/bikeangels ) and grab bikes from one location and take it to an empty location for points. I think distance might also add points to the total. The points add up to free membership and gift cards. Top 3 each month get cash prizes ( https://www.bluebikes.com/bikeangels/leaderboard ).

So, get a bike at one end of the Orange Line. Ride the Orange Line to the other end. Drop off the bike. Points.

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There is probably a surge of use on mondays.

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As a frequent points-getter (it's moderately fun!) there is no sense in bringing a bike on the T for points. The points are not distance-based; the most points come from finding bikes which are near each other and moving them and walking or running back. The most points you can get from a single move is 8, and the points are worth 10 cents each (after the first 80, which extend your membership). Even if you have a monthly pass and your marginal trip cost is 0, given the state of the T these days, it's almost never going to be worth hauling one of those bikes on and off of the train rather than just, you know, riding it.

There do seem to be some more abandoned/stolen BlueBikes. I reported one to a rebalancing driver and he said "we don't touch ones we find, since there are often people who have stolen then nearby and they are usually not very nice." I think that's company policy. When I find one I have taken to returning it (you can report it, but BlueBikes doesn't seem to respond quickly). But I look around first and am ready to make a quick getaway. I think people have found that with enough force they can wrestle some bikes out of the docks if they have some sort of defect and try that.

All of this said, it's a great system, and one of the most successful. Minneapolis-St Paul's system went belly-up (they now have more expensive/dangerous dockless scooters). Systems with E-bikes get expensive, complicated and inequitable quickly. (Chicago, for instance, costs 17 to 42 cents per minute for e-bikes and scooters, quickly surpassing transit costs for many trips and even cab fare for others.) BlueBikes average about 15,000 rides per day, meaning that each bike gets used nearly 10 times per day (more, on the busiest days), a per-bike use rate on par with New York. (Lots of stats here)

I do see complaints that it can be hard to find a bike/dock in certain places at certain times of day, and so I do wish they would raise the points available for moving bikes (they raised the maximum from 3 to 4, so the per trip maximum from 6 to 8, a few years ago). In the fall of 2021, they had a double-point couple of weeks, which meant that it was almost possible to earn minimum wage moving bikes and running around. Gets you outside in fresh air, at least.

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Seems like the new standard is to take a surreptitious photo of the shady characters *before* you ask them politely to stop being jerks -- just in case you have to make a police report.

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My bike was lost or stolen
If a bike gets lost, goes missing, or gets stolen, please contact Bluebikes customer service or call 1 (855) 948-2929, now supported by Lyft. We encourage you to file a police report in the event that a bike has been forcibly taken or stolen.

Please know that bikes that are missing for longer than 24 hours can result in a $1,200 fee (plus tax) charged to the account holder that took out the bike.

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Sometimes people don't dock them properly - make sure that the bike is secured because then it is "checked in" or find another dock.

Sometimes the thieves just shake bikes until they find one that has a wonky docking lock.

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Than the classic subway movie the Warriors.

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These seem more like packs. Teens run in packs.

I think the preferred collective is a gross of teens.

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If you don't make enough paper for whip, you are not part of anything. But if fanboys & fangirls buy the merch, gangs will take advantage of the advertising to intimidate the public.

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Now are we talking about printer paper, receipt paper, toilet paper?

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Magoo shall find these sea urchins and fart in their general direction. Magoo.

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It’s unfunny comments or the fact that it never responds to any comments directed at or about it?
Kinopio/Pinocchio is another one who does not respond to comments and they also attract an extraordinary number of reactions and comments full of ire.
They both beat out Johnboy “Swamp Thing” Costello for the Most Despised award. No mean feat!!

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It’s cute that you pretend like you aren’t sure what my screename is ;)
For someone who’s “most despised” my comments sure do get a lot of clicks on the ol’ thumbs up button!

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You almost always get one of mine apart your ageist and dog hating comments. Being despised by the bike hating crew, the Costellos and the robos, is a mark of honor of sorts.
I’m surprised that you responded to my comment or that you cared about being liked. My money is on you not responding to this one.

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at rebalancing stations. Almost every time I’ve used blue bikes this year from stations from kenmore to Allston/Brighton/Cambridge I’ve had a problem with empty or full stations, or stations with non-working docks.

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Did the victim expect the badly behaved youth listen to his authority?

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You will respect my authoritah!

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Sometimes they just need to be called out from an external source that doesn't reinforce their group vibe. I've done it before.

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It usually works for me. Not dead yet.

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One of the first times I felt like an old person was telling a group of teens to stop jumping on tables in a dunks and they actually listened. I have some experience educating teens so I've gotten the teacher reprimanding voice down pretty well.

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It's neither useful nor kind to blame the victim.

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