Thieves snatched his phone in London â it was in China a month later
Early on a Saturday morning in April, Akara Etteh was checking his phone as he came out of Holborn tube station, in central London.
A moment later, it was in the hand of a thief on the back of an electric bike â Akara gave chase, but they got away.
He is just one victim of an estimated 78,000 âsnatch theftsâ in England and Wales in the year to March, a big increase on the previous 12 months.
The prosecution rate for this offence is very low â the police say they are targeting the criminals responsible but cannot âarrest their way out of the problemâ. They also say manufacturers and tech firms have a bigger role to play.
Victims of the crime have been telling the BBC of the impact it has had on them â ranging from losing irreplaceable photos to having tens of thousands of pounds stolen.
And for Akara, like many other people who have their phone taken, there was another frustration: he was able to track where his device went, but was powerless to get it back.
Phone pings around London
He put his iPhone 13 into lost mode when he got home an hour or so later â meaning the thieves couldnât access its contents â and turned on the Find My iPhone feature using his laptop.
This allowed Akara to track his phoneâs rough location and almost immediately he received a notification to say it was in Islington. Eight days later, the phone was pinging in different locations around north London again.
In a move says he âwouldnât recommendâ with hindsight, he went to two of the locations his phone had been in to âlook aroundâ.
âIt was pretty risky,â he said. âI was fuelled by adrenaline and anger.â
He didnât speak to anyone, but he felt he was being watched and went home.
âI am really angry,â he said. âThe phone is expensive. We work hard to earn that money, to be able to buy the handset, and someone else says âscrew thatâ.â
Then, in May, just over a month after the theft, Akara checked Find My iPhone again â his prized possession was now on the other side of the world â in Shenzhen, China.
Akara gave up.
It is not uncommon for stolen phones to end up in Shenzhen â where if devices canât be unlocked and used again, they are disassembled for parts.
The city is home to 17.6 million people and is a big tech hub, sometimes referred to as Chinaâs Silicon Valley.
Police could not help
In the moments after Akaraâs phone was stolen, he saw police officers on the street and he told them what had happened. Officers, he said, were aware of thieves doing a âloop of the areaâ to steal phones, and he was encouraged to report the offence online, which he did.
A few days later, he was told by the Metropolitan Police via email the case was closed as âit is unlikely that we will be able to identify those responsibleâ.
Akara subsequently submitted the pictures and information he had gathered from the locations where his stolen phone had been. The police acknowledged receipt but took no further action.
The Metropolitan Police had no comment to make on Akaraâs specific case, but said it was âtargeting resources to hotspot areas, such as Westminster, Lambeth and Newham, with increased patrols and plain clothes officers which deter criminals and make officers more visibly available to members of the communityâ.
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Lost photos of mum
Many other people have contacted the BBC with their experiences of having their phones taken. One, James OâSullivan, 44, from Surrey, says he lost more than ÂŁ25,000 when thieves used his stolen deviceâs Apple Pay service.
Meanwhile, Katie Ashworth, from Newcastle, explained her phone was snatched in a park along with her watch, and a debit card in the phone case.
âThe saddest thing was that the phone contained the last photos I had of my mum on a walk before she got too unwell to really do anything â I would do anything to get those photos back,â the 36-year-old says.
Again, she says, there was a lack of action from the police.
âThe police never even followed it up with me, despite my bank transactions showing exactly where the thieves went,â she said.
âThe police just told me to check Facebook Marketplace and local second-hand shops like Cex.â
âBattle against the clockâ for police
So why are the police seemingly unable to combat this offence â or recover stolen devices?
PC Mat Evans, who has led a team working on this kind of crime for over a decade within West Midlands Police, admitted that only âquite a low numberâ of phones that are stolen actually get recovered.
He says the problem is the speed with which criminals move.
âPhones will be offloaded to known fences within a couple of hours,â he said.
âItâs always a battle against the clock immediately following any of these crimes, but people should always report these things to the police, because if we donât know that these crimes are taking place, we canât investigate them.â
And sometimes just one arrest can make a difference.
âWhen we do catch these criminals, either in the act or after the fact, our crime rates tank,â he said.
âQuite often that individual has been responsible for a huge swathe of crime.â
But the problem is not just about policing.
In a statement, Commander Richard Smith from the National Police Chiefsâ Council, which brings together senior officers to help develop policing strategy, said it would âcontinue to targetâ the most prolific criminals.
âWe know that we cannot arrest our way out of this problem,â he said.
âManufacturers and the tech industry have an important role in reducing opportunities for criminals to benefit from the resale of stolen handsets.â
Tracking and disabling
Stolen phones can already be tracked and have their data erased through services such as âFind My iPhoneâ and âFind My Deviceâ, from Android.
But policing minister Dame Diana Johnson said this week the government wanted manufacturers to ensure that any stolen phone could be permanently disabled to prevent it being sold second-hand.
Police chiefs will also be tasked with gathering more intelligence on who is stealing phones and where stolen devices end up.
A growing demand for second-hand phones, both in the UK and abroad, is believed to be a major driver behind the recent rise in thefts, the government said.
The Home Office is to host a summit at which tech companies and phone manufacturers will be asked to consider innovations that could help stop phones being traded illegally.
PC Evans said there was âno magic bulletâ, but he said there was one thing manufacturers could do which would be âenormously helpfulâ to the police â more accurate tracking.
âAt this moment in time, phone tracking is okay,â he said.
âBut itâs not that scene in Total Recall yet, where youâre able to run around with a tracking device in your hand, sprinting down the road after a little bleeping dot.
âI appreciate itâs a big ask from the phone companies to make that a thing, but that would be enormously helpful from a policing perspective.â
Apple and Android did not provide the BBC with a statement, but Samsung said it was âworking closely with key stakeholders and authorities on the issue of mobile phone theft and related crimesâ.
Additional reporting by Tom Singleton