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Maintenance Building Break In

5 posts
  1. Timothy Johansen
    Timothy Johansen avatar
    0 posts
    12/10/2013 8:12 AM
    As part of an ongoing investigation, our local police department asked me to put this post out to as many as possible. A few weeks ago, our maintenance building was burglarized. Not that uncommon, but the way the building was entered and what was taken is what was unusual. Our building was entered by cutting an opening through the side of the building. Removal of screws from the metal siding and making a 2 foot cut across the top made for a nice 5 foot tall door for entrance. Line trimmers, backpack blower and hedge trimmer were taken, but next to the hedge trimmer were thousands of dollars in hand tools which were left untouched. It was quite obvious it was targeted to specific needs. Recently, through the investigation, I was made aware of a similar break in not too far from here. If any of you have had a similar break in or have heard of one, get in touch with me. More than anything else, we just want to make you aware of this type of break in and alert you to keep an eye on people who might be driving around your buildings.



  2. Clay Putnam
    Clay Putnam avatar
    33 posts
    12/10/2013 10:12 AM
    Tim,

    We had a couple break-ins toward the end of 2012 season. This particular maintenance facility houses the golf course equipment as well as several landscape mowers for the local municipality. Our only method of security was locked doors, exterior lighting, and the removal of keys to all equipment. No alarm system or security cameras. Additionally, the entire golf course is secured with fencing.

    The first break-in occurred at night and was a "recon" mission so to speak. The perps used a crowbar to gain entrance thru a man door. The perps had access to all tools, equipment, etc but took nothing. In response to the break-in, the owner of the building installed additional locking mechanisms to the walk-thru doors. The second break-in occurred a couple weeks later, again at night. This time the perps knocked out the exterior lighting and tried to gain access thru the walk-thru doors but failed. This was evident by the damage to the door frames. The extra locks worked. Then the perps got creative. They pried up the bottom section of the overhead door enough to allow a person to crawl under. They then hit the garage door opener on the inside wall and presto, they were in. This time they took three Toro commercial zero-turn landscape mowers. They must have brought their own mower keys because all the keys to the equipment had been removed at the end of the prior day. They drove off with the mowers never to be seen again. We discovered they had cut a hole in the fencing on the opposite side of the property which they used to escape with the mowers. Nothing else was taken. Weed eaters, back pack blowers, hand tools, nothing.

    The building now has a security system and we have not experienced another break-in since. We surmised the first break-in was for scouting purposes and they came back the second time with their own universal keys to start and remove the mowers. I can only guess that they did not take the smaller items (weed eaters, back pack blowers and such) because of the distance from the maintenance building to the hole in the fence. Guess only.



  3. Andy Jorgensen
    Andy Jorgensen avatar
    1 posts
    12/10/2013 4:12 PM
    Although not a metal wall sheet, I have had one incident where thieves removed a section of chain link that was acting as a wall along the outside storage building. Removed about three bolts and they were in. From there they tried to start a landscape mower and failed. They couldn't figure out the parking break needed to be on in order to start it. Nothing else was taken, but this could be due to all the small tools were inside the locked adjacent metal building, which had an alarm.

    Since they got nothing, couldn't figure out how to start the mower, and never returned, we wrote it off as an isolated incident.

    We did start removing keys form the outside equipment after that and added some extra perimeter lighting as well as cut back the overgrown landscaping originally intended to hide the shop from the surrounding development. It seemed the lack of lighting and the landscaping provided a perfect opportunity for someone to attempt a theft. This break-in did allow me to budget for an alarm on the new maintenance facility that we later constructed.



  4. Joe Brophy
    Joe Brophy avatar
    0 posts
    12/11/2013 11:12 AM
    If Sunday was still there he would have chewed their leg off.



  5. Timothy Johansen
    Timothy Johansen avatar
    0 posts
    12/12/2013 6:12 AM
    Got that right, Joe !



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