Psychic Prevention of Crimes
 
I awoke early this morning and I could feel pain in my body, like someone in a physical struggle.  It felt like someone trying to pull someone's arm off, that person got away, although they will have a sore shoulder for a while.  I could sense people struggling and fighting in the streets, in secret places, hidden from prying eyes.  Some people were fighting for their lives.  Some people were struggling against harassment and stalkers.  Father's fighting their daughters.  Mothers fighting sons.  Stalkers seeking to attack strangers!  I wanted to scream out a warning!
 
I had my own brush with danger.  I awoke early one morning and I could hear someone at my bedroom window.  It was about 2:50 a.m.  I heard metal scratching against metal.  I could see the outline of a man, standing at my window through the closed shades.  My heart was beating like a drum and I didn't have a plan.  I didn't know what to do.  I never figured I would have to fight to protect myself, in my own home.  I lay in bed trembling.  I tried to calm myself.  I could hear my neighbor upstairs playing music way too loud at this time of night.  I got up and quietly crept to the window.  I sneakily peered out and I stood face to face with him, separated by only a thin pane of glass.  I looked at him and he looked at me.   He appeared to be a hispanic man, about 5'9".  He wore a dark stocking cap on his head, I think it was dark blue but it was dark outside, it could have been black.  He had a metal object in his hands.  When he realized that I saw him and was looking at him intently, he bolted and ran.  I ran to the front door and turned on the front door light and called the police.  When the police came, he explained that the potential attacker knew I was a woman because of the big billowy christmas wreath I had on my front door.  At that time, I didn't have a clue or a plan.  Now, after taking safety classes, security armed training, I know how to use normal household items to defend myself (such as smashing his hand in the window with a hammer) if I must as well as armed training.  I don't want to hurt anybody and I don't want to be hurt.  However, if I must fight, I now know how to fight, as a woman, and win against a male attacker, who is bigger and stronger than me.
 
There are many reasons why crime is so prevalent in America, too many to go into detail about.  Therefore, a few quick tips on safety measures that most people will benefit from.  While prayers and safety work hand in hand, prevention is the perfect remedy.  Trust your intuition, if you feel like something is wrong, your probably right.  Your angels first reveal truth to you and then to those around you.
 
No weapon, no backup... Just the idea of trading blows with a trained killer- who might have the skills to rip your head off- just does not appeal to anyone, especially me. 
 
But the fact is that we have to know how to win a fight- even against a trained killer. Whether you are a soldier, cop, or civilian, it’s your duty to protect your family, your friends, your neighborhood, and your country.

It’s our duty as men and women to protect the people who depend on us, and having the skills to do so should not take years upon years of training in some dojo. Or learning through trial and error on the street. Or potentially getting killed on the battlefield.

No, there had to be a better answer. There had to be a way to combine prayer, safety, intuition and prevention and to create a deterrence to crime, before it happens.
 

What basic steps can I take to prevent my house from being burglarized?

Think of your home as a box and the doors and windows as being openings to that box. Burglars will enter through doors or windows accessible from the ground. Just closing and locking these accessible openings  is basic burglary prevention. As a rule of thumb, all doors should be made out of solid core wood or be metal-clad to prevent or delay forced entry. All exterior doors should be equipped with heavy-duty deadbolt locks supported by heavy-duty four-screw strike plates fastened with three-inch wood screws solidly into the door frame. Exterior doors should have a peep-hole viewport to see who's outside before opening. Accessible sliding glass windows and doors should have secondary security devices (like a metal security bar) to prevent forced entry or lifting the window pane out if its track.

Family Safety

Our family is at the center of our personal universe. Most people would do almost anything for the sake of their family. That includes protecting them from known dangers and harm. This becomes increasing difficult, at times, because we live in an open society where we share public places with predators and violent criminals. The only place where we have some control over our environment is in our home. We can make our home reasonably safe by fortifying it, as necessary, to protect our families once inside.

Family Security Plan

Whenever your family leaves home they leave that zone of protection that you have created. The secret to keeping your family reasonable safe once they leave home is to have a family security plan. To develop a family security plan you must give careful thought to the public routines of each family member and think of ways to make them safer from the violent people in the world. The best way to accomplish this is to hold a family meeting to discuss this plan and play what if using different scenarios. For example, what if we need to use the bank ATM machine and a stranger is standing too close behind you, peering over your shoulder?  Should you speak up? Cause a scene?  Call over a store manager? YES!  What steps should we take to make the process safer? What if we need to go to the shopping mall? What precautions can we take to be safer in the parking lot? What if someone approaches to rob us while walking to our car on the street at night? Did you know your car can be a tool?  Keep the car between you and any pending attacker.  If the car is locked and you have the key, did you know you can climb under the car and most attackers won't try to come under the car to get you because there's a lot of things to hold on to under the car and it would cause a scene!  What would we do and how would we react? Where would we go and who would we notify in case of emergency?  These conversations will give your family one up on the bad guys in the world.  There are watchdog sites that can tell you how many child molesters or criminals there are in your neighborhood.  Knowing is prevention.

Most people have no such family plan and have not met as a family to discuss what if situations. When or if a criminal assault does occur, the family will not be prepared and will have to rely on instinct in response to the incident. What if their response instincts are wrong or their reactions inappropriate, under the circumstances? We read about these all the time in the newspaper or hear about them on television, for example, where a man tried to overpower a gunman, only to be shot and killed. We have also become aware of incidents where a child was walking home from school and was tricked into a car of a total stranger and kidnapped.

Your home is your castle

...or is it? Are you really safe once you get into your apartment and lock your door? In an open society your apartment should be the sanctuary for you and your family. Your apartment is the only environment where you have control over who can get close to you or your family. Protecting your apartment and family from criminal intrusion should be high on your list of priorities.

Burglary

By far, the most common threat to an apartment unit is burglary. Burglary, by definition, is a non-confrontational crime, but being victimized can leave a family feeling vulnerable and violated.  If you have ever rented an apartment, they always say, get insurance!  To prevent a burglary, it is important to first gain an understanding of who commits them and why. The majority of apartment burglaries occur during the daytime when most people are away at work or at school. Burglaries also occur at night when there are obvious signs that no one is home. Most apartment burglars are young males looking for things that are small, expensive, and can easily be converted to cash. Items like cash, jewelry, guns, watches, laptop computers, and other small electronic devices are high on the list. Quick cash is needed for living expenses and drugs.

Statistics tell us that more than 30% of all apartment burglars gained access through an open door or window. Ordinary household tools like screwdrivers, channel-lock pliers, small pry bars, and small hammers are most often used by burglars. Although apartment burglaries may seem random in occurrence, they actually involve a selection process.  People are watching you now, wondering what you have and whether or not it is worth stealing!  Once you up your security, they will think you saw them coming and they will run in the opposite direction, fearing the cops are on their tails!

The burglar's selection process is simple. Choose an unoccupied apartment with the easiest access, the greatest amount of cover, and with the best escape routes. What follows is a list of suggestions to minimize your risk by making your home unattractive to potential burglars.

Doors and Locks

The first step is to "harden the target" or make your apartment more difficult to enter. Remember the burglar will simply bypass your apartment if it requires too much effort or requires more skill and tools than they possess. Most burglars enter via the front, back, or garage doors. Experienced burglars know that the garage door is usually the weakest followed by the back door. The garage and back doors also provide the most cover. Burglars also know to look inside your car for keys and other valuables so keep it locked, even inside your garage. Apartment managers should use solid core doors and high quality locks on exterior doors that will resist twisting, prying, and lock-picking attempts. A quality Grade-1 or Grade-2 deadbolt lock will have a beveled casing to inhibit the use of channel-lock pliers used for forced entry. A quality door knob-in-lock set will have a 'dead latch' mechanism to prevent slipping the lock with a shim or credit card.

  • Use a solid core wood or metal door for all entrance points
  • Doors should fit tightly into the door jamb
  • Use a quality, heavy-duty, deadbolt lock with a one-inch bolt
  • Use a quality, heavy-duty, door knob-in-lock set with a dead-latch mechanism
  • Use a heavy-duty four-screw strike plate installed with 3-inch screws to penetrate into a wooden door frame
  • Use a wide-angle 160° peephole mounted no higher than 58 inches

Forced Entry

The most common way used to force entry through a door with a wooden frame is simply to kick it open. The weakest point is almost always the strike plate that holds the latch or lock bolt in place followed by glass panels in doors. The average door strike plate is secured with only 1/2-inch screws set into the soft doorjamb molding. These lightweight moldings are often tacked on to the door frame and can be torn away with a firm kick. Because of this construction flaw, it makes sense to upgrade to a heavy-duty four-screw strike plate. They are available in most quality hardware stores and home improvement centers and are definitely worth the extra expense. Install this strike plate using 3-inch screws to cut deep into the door frame stud. This one step alone will deter or prevent most through-the-door forced entries. You and your family will sleep safer in the future.

Sliding Glass Doors

Sliding glass doors are usually installed at the rear of an apartment making them good candidates for entry by a burglar. In warm climates, an experienced burglar knows that sliding glass doors are often left standing open for ventilation or for pet access. Since they slide horizontally, it is important to have a secondary blocking device in place to prevent sliding the door fully open from the outside. This can be easily accomplished by inserting a wooden dowel or stick into the track thus preventing or limiting movement. Other blocking devices available are metal fold-down blocking devices called "charley bars" and various track-blockers that can be screwed down.

Sliding glass doors are notorious for failing to prevent a forced entry attempt especially in apartment buildings. This is because of the wear and tear and lack of maintenance they receive and due to the inadequate nature of many of the latching mechanisms. Sliding glass doors don’t have locks on them, only latches. The latches are made of aluminum and can become worn or out of adjustment. The most common methods used to force entry, aside from breaking the glass, is by prying the door near the latch or lifting the door off the track. The blocking devices described above solve half the equation. To prevent lifting, you need to keep the sliding door rollers in good condition and properly adjusted.

You can also install anti-lift devices such as a pin that extends through both the sliding and fixed portion of the door. There are also numerous locking and blocking devices available in any good quality hardware store that will prevent a sliding door from being lifted or forced horizontally. Place highly visible decals on the glass door near the latch mechanism that indicates that an alarm system, a dog, or block watch/operation identification is in place, if applicable. Apartment managers should be careful not to misrepresent that these devices are in place if they are not. Burglars dislike alarm systems and definitely big barking dogs.

  • Use a secondary blocking device on all sliding glass doors
  • Keep the latch mechanism in good condition and properly adjusted
  • Keep sliding door rollers in good condition and properly adjusted
  • Use anti-lift devices such as through-the-door pins
  • Use highly visible alarm decals, beware of dog decals, or block watch decal, if applicable

Sliding Windows

Windows are left unlocked and open at a much higher rate than doors. An open window, visible from the street or alley, may be the sole reason for an apartment to be selected by a burglar. Ground floor windows are more susceptible to break-ins for obvious reasons. Upper floor windows become attractive if they can be accessed easily from a stairway, tree, fence, or by climbing on balconies. Windows have latches, not locks, and therefore should have secondary blocking devices to prevent sliding them open from the outside. Inexpensive wooden dowels and sticks work well for horizontal sliding windows and through-the-frame pins work well for vertical sliding windows.

For ventilation, block the window open no more than six inches and make sure you can't reach in from the outside and remove the blocking device. In sleeping rooms, these window blocking devices should be capable of being removed easily from the inside to comply with fire codes. Like sliding glass doors, anti-lift devices are necessary for ground level and accessible aluminum windows that slide horizontally. The least expensive and easiest method is to install screws half-way into the upper track of the movable glass panel to prevent it from being lifted out in the closed position. Place highly visible decals on the glass door near the latch mechanism that indicates that an alarm system, a dog, or block watch/operation identification system is in place, if applicable. Apartment managers should be careful not to misrepresent that these devices are in place if they are not.

  • Secure all accessible windows with secondary blocking devices
  • Block accessible windows open no more than 6 inches for ventilation
  • Use anti-lift devises to prevent window from being lifted out
  • Use crime prevention or alarm decals on accessible windows, if applicable

Be a Good Neighbor

Good neighbors should look out for each other. Get to know your neighbors on each side of your apartment and the three directly across from you. Invite them into your apartment, communicate often, and establish trust. Getting a feel as to whether or not you feel positive or negative about your neighbors can help you decipher who you can trust.  Good neighbors will watch out for your apartment and vehicle when you are away, if you ask them. They can report suspicious activity to management, to the police, or to you while you are away. Between them, good neighbors can see to it that normal services continue in your absence by allowing authorized vendors to enter your apartment.  If you can trust your neighbors, however, some neighbors are deceptive and cannot be trusted, therefore, have a plan of safety whether you trust them or not.

The biggest difficulty getting to this level of oversight is taking the first step. You can take it by calling your local crime prevention unit at the police department. Most police departments in large cities have neighborhood watch coordinators to help you set this up. You should invite your adjacent neighbors over to your home for coffee and begin the information exchange. You'll be amazed how the process runs on automatic from there.

Good Lighting, Keeps Away Dangers

Interior lighting is necessary to show signs of occupancy inside a residence at night. Seeing a dark apartment night-after-night sends a message to burglars that you are away. Light-timers are inexpensive and can be found almost everywhere. They should be used on a daily basis, not just when you’re away. Or, just leave a light on ... all the time ... all night ... In this way you set up a routine that your neighbors can observe and will allow them to become suspicious when your normally lighted apartment becomes dark ... or they may feel like someone is always up ... awake and alert ... late at night!

Typically, you want to use light-timers near the front and back windows with the curtains drawn. The pattern of them clicking on and off simulates actual occupancy. It is also comforting not to have to enter a dark residence. Timers can also be used to turn on the television or radio to simulate occupancy during the daytime. After dark, a bright television can be seen flickering through the curtains and gives the feeling that someone is home. Similarly, the radio or television can be heard through the door if turned on loud enough.

Exterior lighting is also very important. It becomes critical if you must park in a common area parking lot or underground garage and need to walk to your front door. The purpose of good lighting is to allow you to see if a threat or suspicious person is lurking in your path. If you can see a potential threat in advance then you at least have the choice and chance to avoid it. Exterior lighting needs to bright enough for you to see 100 feet and it helps if you can identify colors. Good lighting is definitely a deterrent to criminals because they don't want to be seen or identified. Apartment management needs to have a system in place to periodically inspect and replace lighting outages.

Another important area to be well-lighted is the perimeter of your apartment building or home especially at the entryway. Common area lighting on apartment properties should also be on a timer or photo-cell to turn on at dusk and turn off at dawn. Exterior lighting at the rear of an apartment are usually do not turn on automatically. They require you to turn on the light inside switch. The resident can choose to turn these lights on or off. A better idea is to install security lights that activate by infra-red motion sensor. They are relatively inexpensive ($25) and can easily replace an exterior porch light or side door light on townhouse style apartments with rear doors. The heat-motion sensor can be adjusted to detect body heat and can be programmed to reset after one minute. These infra-red security lights are suggested for apartments with patios and back doors.

  • Use interior light timers to establish a pattern of occupancy
  • Use timers to activate the radio or television while away
  • Exterior lighting should allow 100 foot visibility
  • Use good lighting along the pathway and at your door
  • Use light timers or photo-cells to turn on/off lights automatically
  • Use infra-red motion sensor lights for the back door of townhouse apartments

Alarm Systems

Alarm systems definitely have a place in an apartment security plan and are effective, if used properly. The reason why alarms systems deter burglaries is because they increase the potential and fear of being captured and arrested by the police. The deterrent value comes from the alarm company lawn sign and from the alarm decals on the windows. Apartment burglars will usually bypass a unit with visible alarm decals and will look for another property without such a decal. Some people, with alarm systems, feel that these signs and decals are unsightly and will not display them. The risk here is that an uninformed burglar might break a window or door and grab a few quick items before the police can respond. Also, don't write your alarm passcode on or near the alarm keypad.

Alarm systems need to be properly installed and maintained. Alarms systems can monitor for fire as well as burglary for the same price. All systems should have an audible horn or bell to be effective in case someone does break in. However, these audible alarms should be programmed to reset automatically after one minute. The criminal will get the message and will be long gone without your neighbors having to listen to your alarm siren for hours, until it is switched off. If you use a central station to monitor your alarm, make sure your response call list is up to date. Burglar alarms, like car alarms, are generally ignored except for a brief glance. However, if you have established and nurtured your neighborhood watch buddy system, you will experience a genuine concern by your neighbor. It is not unusual to have a neighbor wait for the police, allow them inside for an inspection, and secure the residence. A good neighbor can also call friends or relatives for you, if pre-authorized by you.

  • Alarm systems are effective deterrents with visible signage
  • Alarm systems to be properly installed, programmed, and maintained
  • Alarm systems need to have an audible horn or bell to be effective
  • Alarm systems should automatically reset in one minute or less
  • Make sure your alarm response call-list is up to date
  • Instruct your neighbor how to respond to an alarm bell

Operation Identification

This is a program supported by most police agencies. They recommend that you engrave your drivers’ license number (not social security number) on televisions, stereos, computers, and small electronic appliances. They suggest this so they can identify and locate you if your stolen items are recovered. I suggest that you go way beyond this step.

I recommend that you photograph or videotape your home furnishings, electronic devices, and small appliances and make a list of the make, model, and serial numbers. You should keep this list in a safety deposit box or with a relative or neighbor for safe keeping. Beyond that I recommend that you photocopy important documents and the contents of your wallet annually. You will be thankful that you took these steps in case your home is ever destroyed by fire or flood, is ransacked, or if your wallet is lost or stolen.

  • Identify your valuables by engraving your drivers’ license number (not your SSN)
  • Photograph, video, or record the description and serial numbers of all valuables
  • Photocopy the contents of your wallet annually and other important documents
  • Store the copies off-site in a safe deposit box or with a relative or neighbor

I feel better now.  For those who can hear and understand, I have tried to offer some safety information for you and your family that can keep you safe.  Please trust your own intuition ... if you feel like something is wrong ... you could be right!  Remember what your mother said, an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure!  I tell you this because I know there is absolute evil in this world that cannot be reasoned with and hopefully, you will never have to see it.  If you do see it, I pray, you will be ready to do battle, a few safety measures can save your life!

 
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The angels have a modus operandi for your love life and happiness. Keep the faith. Call me for any concerns that you have: Love & Relationships, Mysteries, Dreams, Career or Life Questions.

Have faith and hope, because there is something positive and new on the horizon that you can't yet see.

Crystal of Light and Love 5
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