
Mike Pavlik is one of a slew of good guys reuniting stolen bikes with their owners.
MIKE PAVLIK SEES a lot while recovering stolen bikes around Minneapolis. Once, pretending to be a potential buyer, he dressed up in khakis and a sport coat and met a seller. Pavlik took note of the bike's make, model and markings, confirming it was the one he was hunting. He asked to take it for a test ride. The seller wanted some collateral.
“Do I look like the kind of guy that steals bikes, dude?” Pavlik recalls asking the man. Then he just pedaled off. An hour later, the seller texted him, “I guess you’re not coming back?”
Pavlik is part of an unusual army: amateur sleuths who find stolen bikes and return them to their owners. As bike theft becomes more profitable, grassroots efforts to thwart thieves are springing up nationwide. Part wannabe detective, part vigilantes, the volunteers say recovering bikes can be strangely fun and addictive.
Pavlik, who is 51, works part time at Trader Joe’s when he’s not gumshoeing for Twin Cities Stolen Bikes, which has a Facebook page with 11,000 members. The volunteer group reunites owners with their wheels, often by tracking stolen bikes for sale on Facebook Marketplace, OfferUp, Craigslist or eBay, and then confronting alleged thieves.
Pavlik likes helping victims almost as much as punishing thieves.
“I like the ability to make someone happy who was victimized,” he says. “I also like screwing someone over who also isn’t expecting it and deserves it.”
Similar efforts exist in Portland, Oregon; San Francisco; and Burlington, Vermont. In New Orleans, Stolen Bikes NOLA has nearly 6,000 Facebook followers and an online “success gallery.”
For Clark Thompson, a Stolen Bikes NOLA spokesman, a highlight is recovering someone’s $50 Walmart bike.
This story is from the February 2025 edition of Reader's Digest US.
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This story is from the February 2025 edition of Reader's Digest US.
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