08 Mar 2008 12:28:19 | Nigel Smithers
What Professional Burglars Know that You Should Know
Professional burglars concentrate on easy targets because they
know their chances of success depend on their coming and going
without being noticed. So what can you do as a homeowner to make
sure you are not inviting someone into your home who doesn’t
belong there?.
“As silly as it sounds,” says Nigel Smithers, a retired police
officer and the CEO of Watchdog Protection Industries, Inc.,
“the first thing you should do before you leave home for work or
play, is make sure that all of your doors, including the garage
door and side garage entrance, are locked. An incredibly large
number of burglars don’t even have to break into a home because
homeowners simply forget to lock a swinging or sliding door.”
Smithers also recommends you remember to attend to ground floor
windows. “During the summer months especially, homeowners
frequently open windows to take advantage of the evening air and
forget to close them before they leave in the morning.”
Aside from the obvious, Smithers also recommends homeowners make
sure that they are not leaving subtle messages that no one is
home. “Unfortunately, many homeowners subscribe to newspapers
that are dropped on the driveway or front step after they depart
for work. This is an open invitation to a professional burglar
who, when canvassing a neighborhood, is observant enough to
recognize an opportunity when he sees it,” he said.
“A professional isn’t likely to hit a home the first time he
sees a newspaper on the driveway at noon, but he may take action
if it becomes a pattern,” he said.
To solve this problem Smithers recommends that homeowners either
make arrangements to have their newspapers delivered to a
location on the property that is not visible to the casual
observer or that arrangements are made for a neighbor to pick it
up when it’s delivered.
Another subtle invitation to a burglar is a security sign in the
yard but no related stickers on windows. “Homeowners all too
often think that the placement of a security sign in the yard
will, in and off itself, convince burglars to move on.
This isn’t the case,” Smithers says. “If a professional sees
that there are no window stickers accompanying that sign, he may
take a closer look. It’s an easy task to view through open
curtains to confirm the presence of window sensors and/or motion
detectors.”
Apart from the basics, Smithers also recommends homeowners
attend to the foliage adjacent to the home. “If bushes can be
used to conceal the burglar’s actions, they will be used,” he
said. “I don’t recommend cutting them down, but a good trimming
once a year will deprive a burglar the opportunity to use them
to conceal his actions.”
According to Smithers, the greatest defense lies in getting to
know one’s neighbors. “The first step to home security involves
neighborhood awareness. If everyone in the neighborhood is in
the habit of attending to the presence of strangers, the less
likely the burglar will bother to stick around,” he said.
“While I don’t recommend confrontation,” he continued, “every
stranger should know when he walks or drives through a
neighborhood that he is being watched.”
.
About Author :
Nigel Smithers is a twenty year veteran of law enforcement and
is the CEO of Watchdog Security Industries, Inc., a home and
business security company serving Southern California. To learn
more about crime in your city, visit
http://www.watchdog-alarms.com/html/crime_stats.html .