A bike thief in Colorado has been sentenced to 16 years in prison after pleading guilty to an organised crime charge following a spate of bike shop burglaries last year.
According to Bicycle Retailer, 23-year-old Austin Butler was one of eight people indicted by the state attorney general as part of an investigation imaginatively titled ‘Operation Vicious Cycle’.
Originally charged with 25 counts, at a hearing last week Butler pleaded guilty to one count of violation of the Colorado Organized Crime Control Act, one count of second-degree burglary, and one count of aggravated motor vehicle theft.
According to the indictment last year, Butler was charged with recruiting participants into the organised crime ring.
It read: “Members of the enterprise had specified roles and responsibilities. Butler recruited burglary participants in the days leading up to each burglary. Often, these participants were friends and acquaintances of his. This was usually done by using Facebook messenger.
“Once a burglary crew was assembled, one or more of the participants would steal a vehicle, which was then used to surveil the chosen bike shop and commit the burglary.”
Prosecutors say that the ring would then use the stolen vans to drive through the front windows of bike shops, before loading the van with stolen bikes. The bikes would then be transferred to other accomplices, who would sell them and abandon the stolen vans.
The crime spree affected bike shops across the Denver and Boulder areas between December 2019 and June 2020, with the value of the stolen and damaged property totalling approximately $1.5 million.
Butler admitted to investigators that he had participated in a number of the break-ins and associated vehicle thefts. He was sentenced to 16 years in prison.
Four co-defendants are scheduled for arraignment later this month.
“I am proud of our prosecutors’ tireless work and collaboration with local law enforcement to hold the defendant accountable for the significant harm he caused to several individuals, businesses and non-profit agencies from this vehicle and bike theft criminal enterprise,” said Colorado’s Attorney General Phil Weiser.
“We are committed to ensuring others charged in this criminal enterprise will be held fully responsible for their actions, and to sending the message that property theft will not be tolerated.”