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CRIMINAL JUSTICE |
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CRIME PREVENTING TIPS
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Home
safety
- Make sure you have sturdy, metal or
solid wood doors at all entries into your home and
that sliding glass and similar doors are properly
secured.
- Install and use well-made deadbolt
locks (1.5 inch throw or greater) on all exterior
doors.
- Make sure all exterior doors have
wide-angle viewers that can be used by everyone in the
house. Install two viewers at different heights if
necessary.
- Trim shrubs and trees that might give
criminals a place to hide or climb to second stories.
- Make sure entry door areas are well
lighted so you can tell who's there. Motion detector
lights, floodlights, or similar lighting can help
brighten up the property so crooks can't hide.
- Make sure everyone - adults, teens,
and younger children - knows house rules for answering
the telephone and the door.
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Child Safety
- Listen to what children tell you
about their lives friends, school, worries, and
fears.
- Make sure you know your child's
friends and the friends' parents.
- Before your children go to another
home, ask the adults there whether they have guns or
alcohol and if so whether these are securely and
safely stored.
- Check out the neighborhood with your
child. Find out whether he or she feels safe or
unsafe. Work with neighbors to address problems such
as unsafe "shortcuts," dangerous
intersections, areas where shrubbery needs trimming
back, and a lack of safe places to seek help.
- Urge kids to play in groups, which
are far less susceptible to an approach by strangers.
- Set up clear rules for play after
school, on weekends, and during summer and holiday
times. Review them regularly with your child.
- Be a caring adult and a role model.
Let kids know that they can tell you anything and that
you will listen.
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Neighborhood
Safety
- Start or strengthen a Neighborhood
Watch. Almost every local police or sheriff's
department in the nation can help you.
- Find out whether your area has
community policing. Work with officers who are
assigned to help your neighborhood reduce problems
that cause crime.
- Help those who need a hand making
their homes more secure, such as seniors, people
living alone, or persons with disabilities. Trim
shrubs, install wide-angle viewers, help pick up
litter, put in deadbolt locks.
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School
Safety
- Tell your child that anything that
makes him or her uncomfortable or suspicious should be
reported immediately to you and to school officials.
- Make sure your child travels in
groups to and from school; kids in groups are
generally safer.
- Encourage your child's school to
provide anger management and conflict resolution
training and to consider enlisting students as
mediators for their peers - even elementary-age
children have done it well.
- Ask about the safety plan for your
child's school. How are local police involved? How are
students and parents involved? What emergencies plans
are in place?
- Check out the routes your child takes
when walking or biking to school - whatever your
child's age. Check out school bus or regular bus stop
areas if your child uses them. Look for hazardous
shortcuts that might tempt kids or take them out of
public view. Agree on safe walking and biking areas.
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Vacation
Safety
- Make sure your home is secure - all
deadbolts locked, lights left on timers, deliveries
canceled or being collected by a trusted neighbor who
has your travel schedule. Have a neighbor park their
car in your driveway.
- Take only the credit and other cards
that you will absolutely need. Carry traveler's checks
instead of cash. Record information on these cards and
any valuable equipment that you take with you. Take a
copy of this information with you and leave a copy
with a friend or family member.
- Study up in advance on your vacation
destination. Know where you want to go and how you
want to get there. Ask hotel personnel about the
safety of areas off the regular tourist path.
- Don't leave valuables in full view in
the car - your own or a rental. Leave them in the
trunk or, better still, in your room safe or hotel
safe.
- Set up rules for each day's outings
on where and how you'll link up if you become
separated.
- Don't leave rooms unlocked in your
lodgings. Insist that everyone carries his or her key
when outside the room.
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Senior
Safety
- Be alert when out and about. Go with
friends or family, not alone.
- Carry your purse close to your body,
not dangling by the straps. Put a wallet in an inside
coat or front pants pocket.
- Don't carry credit cards you don't
need or large amounts of cash.
- Use direct deposit for Social
Security and other regular checks.
- Keep car doors locked, whether you
are a passenger or a driver. Be particularly alert in
parking lots and garages. Park near an entrance.
- Sit close to the driver or near the
exit while riding the bus, train, or subway.
- If someone or something makes you
uneasy, trust your instincts and leave.
- Install good locks on doors and
windows and use them. Don't hide keys in mailboxes and
planters or under doormats. Leave an extra set of keys
with a neighbor or friend.
- Ask for photo ID from service or
delivery people before letting them in the door. If
you are still uneasy, call the company to verify.
- Be sure your street address number is
large, clear of obstruction, and well lighted so
police and other emergency personnel can find your
home quickly.
- Consider a home alarm system that
provides emergency monitoring for burglary, fire, and
medical emergencies.
- Don't fall for anything that sounds
too good to be truea free vacation; sweepstakes
prizes; cures for cancer and arthritis; a low-risk,
high-yield investment scheme.
- Never give your credit card, phone
card, Social Security, or bank account number to
anyone over the phone. It's illegal for telemarketers
to ask for these numbers to verify a prize or gift.
- Don't let anyone rush you into
signing anythingan insurance policy, a sales
agreement, a contract. Read it carefully and have
someone you trust check it over.
- Beware of individuals claiming to
represent companies, consumer organizations, or
government agencies that offer to recover lost money
from fraudulent telemarketers for a fee.
- If you're suspicious, check it out
with the police, the Better Business Bureau, or a
local consumer protection office. You can also call
the National Consumers League Fraud Information Center
at 800-876-7060.
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