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Police searching for man accused of masturbating in front of women on GO trains in Hamilton and Burlington

Police searching for man accused of masturbating in front of women on GO trains in Hamilton and Burlington

CTV News21-05-2025
Halton police are searching for a man who allegedly masturbated in front of women on two GO train trips between Toronto, Hamilton, and Burlington earlier this month.
Police in Halton are searching for a man who allegedly masturbated in front of women on two separate GO train trips between Toronto, Hamilton, and Burlington earlier this month.
Police say the first incident happened on May 7 on a Lakeshore West GO Train travelling from Toronto's Union Station to Hamilton's West Harbour station at around 9:30 p.m.
In a release, Halton Regional Police Service (HRPS) said the man was sitting in train 1733, coach 2317, when he 'continuously masturbated over his shorts while staring at a female passenger.'
He was described as wearing a blue V-neck t-shirt, grey jacket, dark shorts, black crocs, and a beige baseball cap with a logo on it at the time.
GO train indecent act
Halton police are searching for a man who allegedly masturbated in front of women on two GO train trips between Toronto, Hamilton, and Burlington earlier this month.
The second incident happened on May 10, according to police, on a Lakeshore West GO Train travelling from Union to Burlington's Aldershot station at around 11:15 p.m.
That time, the suspect was sitting in train 1739, coach 2227, when he 'exposed his genitals to a female passenger and masturbated in her presence.'
In that instance, police say he was wearing a black t-shirt, shorts, black crocs, a beige baseball cap, and headphones.
Investigators further describe the man as having a large to medium build and standing between six-foot-two to six-foot-four.
Neither one of the victims was injured in either of the interactions, police say.
This investigation is ongoing and anyone with further information is asked to contact HRPS at 905-825-4777, ext. 2216, or Crime Stoppers anonymously.
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The 1957 Gretsch 6120 Chet Atkins model, in western orange, is considered the Holy Grail by some connoisseurs of the brand. To count Bachman among them would be an understatement. The Canadian music icon would go on to buy a dozen orange 6120s of the era, all of them perfectly alike to the unobsessed ear. But to Bachman, they were each a reminder of what he'd had, and lost. Bachman Lookin' Out for Number 1 Randy Bachman with his 1957 Gretsch guitar in the video for "Lookin' Out for Number 1" in 1975. The guitar was stolen from Toronto the following year. 'So I enter my midlife crisis with this on my mind and I buy every Gretsch that gets offered to me,' he says. 'I end up with 385 Gretsch guitars. I go insane.' Bachman amassed such a collection that when the Gretsch family wrested back control of the company in the late 1980s, with a view to restarting production on its classic models again, they came to Bachman for help. His Gretsch collection, by then the largest and most complete in the world, would provide the templates for the old models — as what remained of the early Gretsch prototypes had long since been destroyed in a pair of disastrous factory fires. And so the company borrowed his guitars, five or six at a time, and meticulously copied every detail. 'Every Gretsch that you see today, at any store or anybody playing, is a copy of one that was in my collection,' Bachman says. Three years later, the company was firmly back on its feet and owner Fred Gretsch, the fourth in the family lineage to bear that name, approached Bachman to buy his guitars and establish an official Gretsch museum collection. 'LIKE AN ELECTRIC SHOCK' Then came the COVID-19 pandemic. Stuck at home, Bachman was making YouTube videos with his son, Tal, and his son's partner, KoKo, when he got an email from an old neighbour. 'I found your Gretsch guitar in Tokyo,' the message read. 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The Japanese pop musician speaks no English and Bachman speaks no Japanese. Luckily, Bachman's soon-to-be daughter-in-law, KoKo, is fluent in both. 'So it was kind of like the United Nations because we're here in my living room and Takeshi is there in Japan with his manager and I say hello and then we stop and [KoKo] translates it into Japanese and then he asks a question and she translates it back,' he says. Takeshi guitar Japanese musician Takeshi bought this Gretsch guitar in Tokyo without knowing it had been stolen from Randy Bachman in 1976. (Takeshi) A few minutes into the call, Takeshi reaches his hand out of the camera's view and pulls into frame the very bone of contention. 'I am absolutely struck right in my chest, like an electric shock,' says Bachman. 'This is my guitar, and it looks one day older than when it was stolen. Whoever had it, loved it and took care of it.' Trouble is, Takeshi loves the guitar too. He isn't about to surrender it on goodwill alone. 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