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Cops and Robbers

Copyright Ashburton Guardian

Yesterday Clemency and I drove up to Christchurch to meet and talk with Bishop Victoria Matthews. It was a pleasant conversation: Victoria and I seemed to agree on pretty much everything, so she is obviously a person of discernment, intelligence and taste. The weather was clear and still so the 4 hour drive was pleasant, though not without incident.

Two hours up the road, just north of Timaru we were passed by a couple of police cars with sirens blaring and lights flashing. Relieved that it wasn't me they were after, we pulled into Temuka to see if we could get a cup of coffee. Temuka is a three horse town, minus about two and a half of the horses, and usually, parking is not a problem. Not yesterday. The streets....sorry....street was filled with cars most of which had a zipper pattern on the side and flashing blue lights on the roof. There were burly guys in blue serge and bullet proof vests wandering around with little high tech boxes sewn onto their shirts and guns - yes, GUNS cradled in their arms. It seemed that 10 minutes before we arrived the local branch of the ANZ Bank had been robbed. The entire town was standing around, gaping. We found a cafe and the waitress told us that a young guy had held up the bank with a gun, and stolen a car to escape. The cafe was at the other end of the street, but news travels fast in Temuka. The coffee wasn't great. We left soon after, and another mile or two up the road we were passed by an elderly Mazda doing, maybe, 140 kph. A respectable distance behind was a lone zipper car, headlights on, blue lights flashing, keeping tabs on but not trying to stop the Mazda. Another 40km on and we went through Ashburton where there was a traffic jam. At the roundabout at the Southern entrance to the town there was a pile up: three very munted cars including the old Mazda, and, in pristine condition, some ambulances, more police cars and in not such great condition, a young woman with a bloodied face and handcuffs.

All these incidents were part of the same story. Some criminals are fiendishly clever, some are not. From all appearances, this seems to have been one of the latter. It's easy enough, I suppose, to walk into a bank with an imitation pistol, point it at the teller and say "give me some money." That bit requires not much thought at all. The tricky bit is knowing what to do next: when you are standing outside the bank with a bag of money in one hand, a toy gun in the other, and converging on the town are 30 highly trained, very fit, heavily armed young men and women for whom this sort of malarkey is exactly why they joined the force in the first place. The robber yesterday, apparently stole his getaway car after he performed the robbery and didn't seem to have thought strategically about his escape except to drive towards Christchurch where there would be more police, more cars, more helicopters, more dogs and more trouble waiting for him.

And so today, as the result of his lack of thinking, there are a couple of thousand citizens of Temuka all feeling slightly violated that the stuff that you read about in the newspapers has found its way into their safe little town. There is a person - and from the look of the car, a person without a lot of spare cash - wondering how to get to work or pick up the kids now that their wheels have been destroyed. There is a young man who woke today in hospital with the injuries he sustained when the robber drove at some speed into the rear of his parked car. There are two other people with fewer injuries but with similarly wrecked vehicles. There are a dozen or so bank employees still in slight shock after looking the wrong way down the barrel of a gun. And of course there is a young man, and maybe a young woman who are only my daughter Catherine's age, and who may not be free again for many long years to come. They are someone's children. Someone's grandchildren.

All this pain and destruction and cost. I read about it all this morning in the papers and on the internet with a morbid fascination; and, somehow, it doesn't seem to me to be evil so much as stupid; mind numbingly, knuckle headedly, brown stuff for brains, colossally stupid; and desperately sad.

As are most of our sins, I suppose. On a smaller scale, perhaps but maybe not all that much smaller.

Comments

Peter Carrell said…
So that's why Bishop Victoria wasn't in the office yesterday :) ... more seriously, what a fantastically well-written reflection. Might I on behalf of all your readers earnestly/seriously/pleadingly encourage/challenge/cajol/insist ... ok, then, just hope you become ACANZP's first "blogging bishop"?
Barbara Harris said…
Beautiful prose, clarity,style and wit. And compassion for all of us.
Thank you.
kiorana123 said…
My Lord Bishop elect, I remember that you several times mentioned a red motorcycle you hoped you might own one day. I have today celebrated Mass and then enjoyed a Harley ride round the water front in Auckland with a person who has recovered from breast cancer. Her new Harley was her wellness treat. If you were to choose a modest Bishop's chariot, might you not also be able to ride a Diocesan motorcycle?! A motorcycle puts you in touch with the elements and gives you Blog thinking time. You may also connect with a lot of really interesting people the church generally doesn't "touch." A humble hospital Chaplain and HBD (Has Been Dean.)
Kelvin Wright said…
What a good idea. But as far as motorcycles go, there is something that comes back to haunt me. When my children were younger one or two of them expressed an interest in motorcycles. I told them (quite truthfully) that I knew many people who had owned bikes and every bike owner I ever knew had come off at least once; or three times in my own case. Now, my expressions of interest in two wheeled transport are met with my own words quoted, most unjustly, back to me.

But of course it's all different now. I'm older. Even though the engines are twice the size and ten times the quality that they used to be, I'd be careful
Verna said…
Kelvin - I agree with your children repeating your own arguments back to you [I think]. I have owned 4 motorbikes from gutless 50cc ones that go 44 mph down a very steep hill with a stiff tail wind up to a Yamaha 400, and come off rather more than I care to!! I also had a fiance who was killed while riding a twin Norton and I haven't ridden one since then - that was 35 years ago - don't think I'd even be game to ride a geriatric scooter these days. At least you get somewhat more protection from the idiots on the road in a car or 4wd. Stay safe please!

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