Rev. Gregory Johnson, a former Ocean City councilman, tells the governing body that local teens should not be labeled as "gangs and thugs."
By DONALD WITTKOWSKI
Ocean City’s police department will increase patrols throughout town, particularly along the Boardwalk and in the downtown business district, to crack down on groups of unruly teenage bikers that seem to have become more brazen in recent weeks.
Speaking during a City Council meeting Thursday night, Police Chief Jay Prettyman outlined his department’s strategy for dealing with a problem that includes bikers hurling insults or profanity at motorists and banging their hands on cars while riding down the streets.
Prettyman, though, emphasized that the bikers are not part of organized gangs that are deliberately menacing the city.
“They’re just kids,” he said in an interview after the three-hour Council meeting. “Most of them are peaceful. There are just some instigators who are causing aggravation for everybody.”
Although police have been dealing with troublesome teenage bikers for months by giving them warnings, things reached a crescendo last Saturday when a large group overflowed into the streets, Prettyman said.
“The kids started to antagonize vehicles. Bicyclists came head-on, insulting them, smacking the hood of their cars,” he said.
Prettyman told the Council members that he spoke with Mayor Jay Gillian and met with the police department’s supervisory officers on Sunday and Monday to develop an “action plan” to respond to the teens.
“We were done with the warnings,” he said. “We needed a stronger approach.”
Police will immediately step up their patrols to prevent bikers from getting out hand, Prettyman said. They will also hand out traffic tickets if the bikers are out on the streets and break the law.
“Come the next couple of days, you will see some heavier enforcement and traffic violations,” Prettyman said.
As an added measure, police plan to videotape the groups of bikers to help them identify any teens engaging in rowdy or unsafe behavior.
Prettyman urged the public to contact police if they see something wrong.
“We need people to dial police when it is happening. After the fact defeats the purpose of us being there to stop it,” he said. “We need to partner with the community so we can address the problems.”

City Council members express concern that police may be hampered by a directive from the state's attorney general while dealing with groups of unruly teens.
While speaking to Prettyman, DeVlieger said he is particularly concerned that rowdy teens are intimidating and frightening senior citizens. He noted he has received complaints from residents about teenage bikers.
“I have to advocate for the people. These people want action,” he said.
As a first step, DeVlieger would like to see an increased police presence at the North Street playground to prevent teens from congregating there.
Council President Bob Barr said he was disturbed when he saw videos posted on social media of the teenage bikers stirring up trouble last Saturday. He believes that the problems with the teens “seem to be escalating.”
“If we have to spend more on overtime, equipment, education, whatever it is, we’re Ocean City, that’s what we do. People want to come here because we are a safe place. The videos I saw Saturday night, they were troubling. We can’t have that,” Barr said.
The Council members, Mayor Gillian and Prettyman all agreed that the city needs a broader approach toward solving the problem, including having community meetings with teenagers and their parents.
Councilwoman Karen Bergman said Prettyman should also meet with the community to outline his strategy for handling the groups of teenage bikers.
Gillian noted that his department of Community Services is creating camps and other activities for kids to keep them out of trouble.
“We are trying to get as much things for kids as we can,” Gillian said. “We are doing the best we can with Community Services and we are working with the schools.”
Meanwhile, some members of the public who attended the Council meeting at the Ocean City Music Pier warned city officials not to portray the teenage bikers as “gangs and thugs.”
“I don’t think it was right or fair to put labels on kids,” Rev. Gregory Johnson, a former Ocean City councilman, told the governing body during the public comment portion of the meeting.
Johnson won agreement from Council when he said the entire community needs to work together to address the problem.
Ashley Boyer, an Ocean City resident who has a 12-year-old son who likes to ride his bike, demanded an apology from anyone who said local kids are thugs.
“This is Ocean City. There’s no thugs here. There’s no gangs here,” Boyer told the Council members.
Rev. Gregory Johnson, a former Ocean City councilman, tells the governing body that local teens should not be labeled as "gangs and thugs."