The bikes were also found in the hallways and a garden shed
The illegal off-road bikes and e-scooters that were seized in Warrington(Image: Merseyside Police )
Police found illegal scrambler bikes and e-scooters scattered around a house, including in bedrooms, following a raid. In the early hours of Sunday, January 12, officers executed a warrant at an address on Marshall Avenue in the Bewsey and Whitecross area of Warrington following a previous dangerous driving incident involving an off-road bike registered at the address.
During the search of the address, officers found a total of 13 illegal off-road bikes and e-scooters scattered in various locations across the house, including in the living room, bedrooms, hallways and in a garden shed. Officers also seized a quantity of cannabis from one of the bedrooms in the house.
No arrests have been made at this time. The following day, a second warrant was carried out at another address in the Old Hall area of the town. While there officers located and seized a further eight bikes from within the address.
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Following the raids, police said there will be more uniformed and plain-clothed officers across the town to “deter unsafe driving and catch prolific offenders.” It follows several warrants being carried out as part of Cheshire Police’s Operation HardHit.
Police Constable Matthew Salmon, of the Northern Problem Solving Team in Warrington, said: “Operation HardHit has been rolled out across Warrington in response to concerns from local residents regarding the anti-social and dangerous driving of non-legal off-road bikes – this unsafe use of motorbikes in pedestrian areas is a priority issue and I want to reassure the public that officers will take a robust approach with those causing such harm within your communities.
“Illegal drug usage is closely linked with anti-social behaviour, and over the next few weeks, we will again be stepping up our patrols and conducting warrants at addresses of known offenders to further our efforts in dismantling the groups of individuals intent on disrupting and endangering the lives of residents who are out and about in Warrington.
“Having seized these 21 bikes across our two warrants, we have now successfully taken well over 40 non-legal and off-road bikes off of Warrington’s streets under Operation HardHit, but our work is not done. Our officers will continue carrying out high-visibility patrols in hotspot areas at key times across our town, targeting those intent on causing a nuisance in their community and disregarding the safety of both themselves, other road users and pedestrians.”