TikTok Prankster Found Guilty of Stealing Phone While Riding E-bike

Mizzy, born Bacari-Bronze O’Garro, snatched a woman’s phone while riding a Lime e-bike in London, then attempted to discard the device in a bush.
TikTok Prankster Found Guilty of Stealing Phone While Riding E-bike
Bacari-Bronze O'Garro, also known as Mizzy, leaving Stratford Magistrates' Court on Oct. 26, 2023. (Victoria Jones/PA Wire)
4/30/2024
Updated:
4/30/2024
0:00

TikTok prankster Mizzy has been found guilty of stealing a woman’s phone as he rode past her on an e-bike, before fleeing police and attempting to ditch the device in a bush.

Mizzy, whose real name is Bacari-Bronze O’Garro, was riding a green Lime e-bike on June 15, 2022 as he snatched the phone out of a woman’s hand in central London, Highbury Corner Magistrates’ Court heard.

Appearing in the dock in a black jacket and black trousers, the social media star—known for his controversial “pranks”—was found guilty of theft.

Edward Kalber, prosecuting, told the court O’Garro, then 17, was approached by police officers for unrelated reasons shortly after taking the phone and fled, throwing the device over a fence into bushes before an officer forced him off the bike and he ran away on foot.

The court heard he was subsequently arrested and handcuffed by police officers who found him hiding behind a nearby tree.

Presiding magistrate Fros Kyriacou said she did not find O’Garro’s claim that a friend had handed him the phone “credible”—which was why his fingerprints were on it—nor that he had fled officers because he was “scared” of the police.

Magistrates heard Ruby Hewitt was walking down Highbury New Park in Islington at around 1 p.m. on June 15, 2022 when a man on a bike wearing a blue tracksuit with a black and white scarf on his head grabbed the iPhone 13 Pro Max, worth about £1,000, from her hand as she was distracted, texting on the device.

Ms. Hewitt said she had only seen the back of the man’s head as he rode away but knew he was black because she could see the bottom of his arms and recalled what he was wearing.

She said the encounter lasted around ten seconds, adding, “It made me feel stressed, anxious and quite scared for my safety.”

Three Metropolitan Police officers in an unmarked police car, who did not witness the incident, later became suspicious of O’Garro, who was exhibiting “erratic behaviour, going in and out of the road and moving on to the pavement,” police officer David Clifford told the court.

He added the area was a “prolific phone snatching (and) robberies” hotspot.

O’Garro, 19, told the court he had been given the phone by a friend he was cycling with but had taken no part in the earlier theft.

He said it was because he “felt scared of the police” that he discarded the device, ran away from the officers and responded “no comment” to each question at a later police interview.

The teenager said, “Sometimes I don’t feel comfortable talking to the police because of the negative stereotypes they have in the area.”

Keren Weekes, defending, said there was insufficient evidence to show it was O'Garro who had snatched the phone.

O’Garro was granted unconditional bail to appear for sentencing at the same court on June 13.

PA Media contributed to this report.