Their
Phones Were Stolen in London. Then the Threats Started.
Tens of
thousands of smartphones were reported stolen in the British capital in recent
years. For some victims, losing their phone was only the beginning.
By Lizzie
Dearden and Amelia Nierenberg
Reporting
from London
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/05/23/world/europe/phone-theft-threats-london.html
May 23,
2026, 12:01 a.m. ET
The crime
Alex Pikula reported to the police was one they had heard before: An e-bike
rider had zoomed past as Mr. Pikula left a theater in London’s West End,
ripping his phone from his hands.
It was
frustrating, Mr. Pikula thought, but that was that.
He was
wrong.
His
mother soon started receiving strange texts, claiming to have her son’s emails
and bank information. Then she received a video of a man brandishing a gun.
Then came threats of sexual assault and death.
“I know
who you are and where you live,” read one, full of obscenities and typos. “I’ve
killed or far less than a phone before,”
it went on. “We will see if you value your life over this phone.”
All of
the messages wanted her to do one thing: unlink her son’s Apple ID from his
stolen phone.
A
Citywide Scourge
Mr.
Pikula knew the chances that the police would recover his phone were slim.
A record
81,000 phones were reported stolen in London in 2024, the year Mr. Pikula, 37,
was visiting from Chicago. Even though that number fell to about 71,000 last
year, the scourge of thefts — and the police’s struggle to stop it — has made
both residents and tourists uneasy.
Last
year, London’s main police force, the Metropolitan Police, started focusing
more on international networks that ship stolen phones to China, where the
devices are sold on the black market.
There,
the gangs can run into a problem. Unless unlinked from an Apple ID, they cannot
reset the phone for a new buyer.
Mark
Rowley, the commissioner of the Metropolitan Police, told reporters that
criminals were trying to reset phones to take a new user’s ID.
“That is
what gives it secondhand value,” he said.
“Otherwise,”
said Emmeline Taylor, a professor of criminology at City St. George’s,
University of London, “that phone is almost worthless to them.” To criminals,
she said in an interview, a phone bound to an existing Apple ID is good only
for spare parts.
That is
partly why police officials and experts urge victims to lock down and wipe
stolen devices — without unlinking the ID — rather than meet their demands.
But for
victims and their families, that advice can seem easier said than done.
‘Yo!!’
The first
confusing text to Mr. Pikula’s mother, Judi Pikula, appeared to come from Apple
Pay.
Someone
was trying to use the phone in China, it said. The Apple ID had to be unlinked
for the safety of her son’s financial accounts.
Days
later, a chirpy message arrived from another phone number, this one with the
Philippines’ country code.
“Yo!!” it
started.
The
texter had recently bought the phone and could see, the sender said, Mr.
Pikula’s “messages, emails, cards, bank, notes and personal information.”
A third
message soon arrived, also apparently from the Philippines.
The
phone, it said, would be “auctioned on the black market with your personal
information and everything about you that you had on it.” It included detailed
instructions on unlinking IDs.
“I told
my mom, ‘Just ignore it,’” Mr. Pikula said.
But Ms.
Pikula, 65, was rattled. The Pikulas knew the texts were almost certainly
coming from criminals. The Find My app showed his stolen phone in the Chinese
city of Shenzhen, which victims call a common destination for stolen iPhones.
But Ms.
Pikula was worried: Was there any real threat? “I just didn’t know what to
think,” she said.
Ms.
Pikula was receiving the messages, her son said, because he had set her number
to be displayed through the phone’s “lost mode” function. He had unwittingly
made her the point of call for thieves.
She tried
to ignore the messages until she received a video of a man, wielding a gun,
with a message threatening assault, rape and that her family would be
“slaughtered.”
“I was
freaking out,” she said. “I didn’t think they could do anything, but it’s
pretty scary.”
So
although Mr. Pikula doubted the credibility of the threats, he decided to give
in to the demands.
“I wiped
it,” he said, “and they never texted my mom again.”
Copy-and-Paste
Threats
The
British police say that, because not everyone reports such threats, they have
no way of knowing how many are sent. But they acknowledged that many people had
received them, and six people described their experiences to The New York
Times.
“Some of
those messages were getting quite violent and quite nasty,” said Sgt. Dan
Green, of the City of London Police.
Many
extortionists appear to use the same pattern.
First,
they try deception, often imitating official Apple text. Then, they pretend to
be a sympathetic bystander. If that fails, the threats begin.
“They
ramp up the levels to try to make the extortion work,” said David S. Wall, a
professor of criminology at the University of Leeds.
The
tactics, experts said, play on the fears of victims who have lost one of their
most expensive and sensitive possessions.
“Someone
is holding all of your things that you hold dear in the palm of their hand,”
said Elisabeth Carter, a British criminologist. “And they’re threatening you as
well. It becomes this multifaceted psychological attack.”
Some
gangs appear to use identical language, copying and pasting text, said experts
and victims, who share their ordeals on internet forums.
But
although the threats can be frightening, police officials and criminologists
said they were almost certainly empty, made oceans away by thieves chasing
quick profit.
Physical
violence is “almost certainly not worth the gain of a single phone,” said Toby
Davies, an expert on crime analysis at the University of Leeds.
Sending a
text, on the other hand, is neither high-stakes nor difficult, and the payoff
can be huge. “Even if only a small proportion of recipients comply and allow
them to unlock, it would more than justify the effort,” he said.
Some
victims, like Christopher Bramah-Calvert, 40, dismissed the messages.
After his
phone was stolen in London, his husband — whose number had been listed in “lost
mode” — got the fake Apple text and the supposedly friendly advice. Then he
received the gun video and death threats.
“We kind
of looked at that and just thought, well, that’s ridiculous,” Mr.
Bramah-Calvert said.
But he
recognized that others might feel differently. “Most people would look at it
and feel more intimidated,” he said.
‘Why
Can’t There Be a Kill Switch?’
Mr.
Rowley, the police commissioner, and Mayor Sadiq Khan of London have said that
they are pushing Apple to do more about stolen phones.
“Why
can’t there be a kill switch so a stolen phone is useless?” Mr. Khan said in an
interview. “Why can’t you deny access to the cloud when a phone has been
stolen?”
In a
statement, Apple said it had created security features and protections to deter
theft and protect users’ data. If an iPhone has been stolen, the company
advises owners to put it into Lost Mode; remotely erase the device; and keep
the device on the “Find My” list to prevent it being set up for a new user.
“We
sympathize with people who have had this experience,” the company said, adding,
“We will continue to work tirelessly to reduce the incentives for stealing
Apple devices.”
As for
the threats, they could be investigated under British law, Sergeant Green said,
as an offense of “malicious communications,” a crime that could carry a
two-year jail sentence.
But only
if they were sent from British soil. So in the case of a text sent from China,
he said, “there wouldn’t be an awful lot we could actually do.”
Amelia
Nierenberg is a Times reporter covering international news from London.


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