48 Things
You Can Do To
Help Prevent Crime Where You Live and Work
Around the Home
| When
You're Away from Home |
Your Car
Teenagers
| General
Tips |
At the Office
Around the Home
- Install good secure locks on
doors and windows and use them. Lock the door even
if you leave the house for only a short time.
- Use a dead bolt to replace
key-in-the-knob locks.
- Never open the door to a
stranger. Always ask for photo identification to be
slid under the door.
- Do not leave extra keys in the
mailbox, under doormats, or anywhere else outside
your house. Leave extra keys with a trusted
neighbor.
- Install good exterior lighting.
Burglars are less likely to sneak around where they
can be easily spotted.
- Keep shrubs and landscaping
trimmed below window height to avoid creating hiding
spots.
- Trim back branches that can be
climbed on to reach windows.
- Secure sliding glass doors and
windows with a broom stick or metal Charley Bar.
- Don't leave tools exposed in an
unlocked garage. A burglar can steal them or use
them to enter your home.
- Be sure that door hinges are not
removable from the outside.
- Store ladders inside.
- Keep valuables in a safe deposit
box.
- Don't give strangers information
over the phone. Report annoying calls or repeated
wrong numbers to the police and telephone company.
- Report broken street lights.
- Record your credit card numbers
and serial numbers of valuable documents and store
them in a safe place or in a safe deposit box.
- Keep emergency phone numbers by
the phone.
- If you're in the backyard or
basement, lock your front door.
- Keep garage doors closed and
locked.
- Single women or women living
alone should list only their last name and first
initial on mail boxes or in the telephone directory.
Never use Ms. or Miss.
- Call your local law enforcement
agency and ask for a home security survey. This is a
free service that will tell you exactly how secure
your home is against the possibility from a break
in.
- Mark your property with an
Operation ID number. Operation ID is a free service
provided by your local law enforcement agency
through which you permanently mark or engrave all of
your valuables for identification. Contact your
local law enforcement authorities for more
information or call this TOLL FREE number: (800)
342-4202.
- If you come home to find that
your house has been burglarized, don't touch
anything! Go to a neighbors home and call 911
When You're Away From Home
- Notify your
neighbors that your not home. Ask them to keep an
eye on the house and make sure there are no unwanted
people wandering around your house.
- Stop newspaper delivery, or have
a neighbor pick it up. Same thing goes for mail. If
you'll be away, accumulated newspapers and a stuffed
mailbox is a red flag that screams, "I'm not home!"
- If away for an extended period
during the warmer months, arrange to have your lawn
mowed. During the winter months, arrange with a
neighbor to have your walk shoveled. Offer to do the
same for when he or she is away.
- Some police departments offer a
"Dark House" service. Tell them you'll be away, and
they'll monitor your house. Also be sure to provide
them with an emergency telephone number where you
can be reached.
Your Car
- Lock your
car when your away from it. Never leave your keys in
the ignition even if you'll only be gone for a
minute.
- Don't leave packages on the
seats or where they're visible. Put valuables out of
sight or lock them in the trunk.
- Use your Operation ID number for
your car and its accessories as well as for
valuables in your home.
- Never pick up hitch hikers.
- When you have your car serviced
or parked by a valet, leave only your ignition key
with the car. Your house keys should be kept
separate and taken with you.
- If you're followed or harassed
while driving your car, drive to the police station.
If there is no convenient station available, drive
to a shopping center or gas station that is well lit
and call the police from there.
Teenagers
- Always lock
up your bicycle.
- Engrave your bicycle with an
Operation ID
- Don't hitchhike.
- Use only the lock provided by
your school for securing your locker.
- Drinking and driving is a crime
and is just plain reckless. Don't drink and drive.
Don't accept rides from friends who have been
drinking, as well.
General Tips
- Set up a
buddy system or Neighborhood Watch in your
community.
- Avoid walking on dark streets -
especially if you know the area has a high crime
rate or bad reputation.
- Direct deposit of your
government checks to the bank of your choice is a
free service that saves you trips to the bank and
having to carry unnecessary cash on your person.
- Carry your purse close to the
body with a firm grasp, not dangling where it can be
easily snatched.
- Large sums of money should be
carried in a special secure undergarment or money
belt.
- Don't flash large amounts of
cash. It's an open invitation to a thief.
- Report to police if you see
someone trying to pry open a car window.
- Tell your children not to accept
rides or candy from strangers.
At The Office
- When
leaving, be sure all important files are secured and
your cabinets are locked.
- Keep a minimum amount of petty
cash on hand.
- Get an Operation ID number for
things at the office, label anything that's valuable
that could easily be stolen.
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