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Beiruty wrote:What are going to do when you catch that kid?![]()
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Depends on how you advertise them:randomoutburst wrote:Still, dogs are not always a practical solution for someone looking to deter theft and burglary.
In the words of Larry the Cable Guy 'That's funny right there, I don't care who ya are!'KD5NRH wrote:Depends on how you advertise them:randomoutburst wrote:Still, dogs are not always a practical solution for someone looking to deter theft and burglary.
Officer Dawson is GREAT!! he has come into our office annually and given awesome presentations...Ed4032 wrote:The Plano police are aggresive about crime prevention. Contact Officer Dawson in the Crime Prevention unit. They may want to place a extra patrol in the area.
kP380 wrote:Officer Dawson is GREAT!! he has come into our office annually and given awesome presentations...Ed4032 wrote:The Plano police are aggressive about crime prevention. Contact Officer Dawson in the Crime Prevention unit. They may want to place a extra patrol in the area.
Exactly! Even with a garage full of stolen goods, some good soul/s will come forward and declare it was somebody else's fault that the slease stole the stuff.03Lightningrocks wrote:In my humble opinion they can't do much at all about this kind of thing with the way the laws are set up right now. They would have to catch him with a garage full of stolen goods before even taking his case on as a serious situation.Beiruty wrote:What are going to do when you catch that kid?![]()
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And if that is not bad enough, the thieves hop on a thing called "Craig's List" and brazenly sell the stolen goods on the internet. It is sad Old Gringo, the odds of solving these types of crimes are slim to none and the police departments these days are more concerned with revenue generation than crime prevention. It must be frustrating to the young up and coming rookie when he is told to quit waisting time trying to solve crimes and get out there and write some tickets.Oldgringo wrote:Exactly! Even with a garage full of stolen goods, some good soul/s will come forward and declare it was somebody else's fault that the sleaze stole the stuff.03Lightningrocks wrote:In my humble opinion they can't do much at all about this kind of thing with the way the laws are set up right now. They would have to catch him with a garage full of stolen goods before even taking his case on as a serious situation.Beiruty wrote:What are going to do when you catch that kid?![]()
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Heck... in Plano the theives act as if they are at a shopping center and everything is free. I truly believe the police don't care because they figure the insurance will pay for the losses. Most of the time they don't even take finger prints when called to vehicle burgerly crimes. It has truly become a joke. If it were not for needing a report number for insurance, I wouldn't even waste my valuable time pulling officers away from the speed traps and red light patrols at intersections.saltydog452 wrote:Since my neighborhood has had a new Sheriff and DA as of a few years ago, the pimps, pushers, and prostitues seem to have gone to more profitable work areas.
I can even stop for a R/R crossing, TL ligh, coffee, or a couple gallons of fuel enroute to a 0500 show time at work. This is in NW Dallas.
Maybe politics played a part in the reduction, maybe agressive prosecution. Dunno. Whatever happened, its waaay better now.
salty
Depends on how you advertise them:randomoutburst wrote:Still, dogs are not always a practical solution for someone looking to deter theft and burglary.