| Jim Bove - Redmond Police Community Facilitator |
Dear Redmond Community and Friends,
Please see below crime prevention tips, scams, alerts, and upcoming important dates. Have a great holiday season!
Be safe,
Jim
(Theme: Bruce Willis Movies)
Sin City
From October 1 – December 12 we have had 88 vehicle prowls (the last 12 months we have averaged 33 per month, which is waaaay low…we’re actually 35% down compared to last year at this time). However, the “good” news is that there are actually some hot spots. I’ve always said the best and worst thing about Redmond is there is no real “bad” area of town where many crimes occur—good because it’s safe, but it’s more difficult for patrol officers and crime analysts to predict where crime will happen next. Crime is usually fluid throughout the city, but two main locations have been targeted in the last few months. (There were three “rings” one of which has been solved). The Cleveland/Leary Way area has seen 18 prowls during this time period. The NE 24th/148th Ave NE area has seen 14. The general time frame is Mondays, Tuesdays, and Fridays between 7:00 p.m. – 10:15 p.m. and they tend to occur near businesses where customers will be gone for an extended period of time. Most are “smash & grabs” (smash window, grab what you can) and they are targeting the usual—laptops, small electronics, etc., likely from people who have come from work. For crime prevention tips, visit:www.redmond.gov/PublicSafety/ Police/tips (other pages listed on left side)
Oceans Twelve
We are ending the year the same way we started—with a smattering of residential burglaries. Unlike the vehicle prowls, these have occurred throughout the city with no real rhyme or reason as to location, however, all are during the day (as usual). From October 1 – December 10 we’ve had 32 (11 in October, 13 in November, and 8 through December 10…we have been averaging about eight per month over the last year, so not a huge increase but an increase nonetheless). Items stolen range from the usual computers, electronics, passports, cash, jewelry, etc. (things that are easy to sell) Entry points are usually via door kick-ins, window smashes to rear sliding glass doors/windows, and window breaks next to front doors to access door locks. In a few of the incidents, victims were home and heard someone knocking and ringing the doorbell multiple times but thought ignoring it would make them go away. Once the suspects heard people inside, they take off running. Try to make contact with these people—you don’t have to open the door, just talk through it and tell them you aren’t interested. Let them know someone is home—they aren’t usually looking for a confrontation like you see on TV. Most victims were gone for the day or gone for a long weekend so be sure to utilize your neighbors (did somebody say “Neighborhood Watch?”. Call 911 immediately if you see suspicious activity. Read More >>
