Thieves Hit Real Estate Open Houses
Published: Jun 30, 2010
Here’s a strange proposition; place an ad in the local paper requesting complete strangers come to your home and look inside your kitchen, bathroom, your kids room and your bedroom. In the ad tell them how nice the house is and you want them to see it from 2-4 on Sunday afternoon.
Then, to make it even more interesting, have another stranger (or someone you only have a brief relationship with) show them around the house. Meanwhile you go out, run some errands or have lunch.
Keep the block of knives on the counter and leave everything pretty much where you normally would and when you get home maybe it will still be there. Sound like a sound plan? It’s one that thousands of people execute hundreds and thousands of times a year.
Open houses are (in my mind) a weird process that is otherwise a good way to bring attention to the sale of a home. If the homeowner is smart, they will hire a professional real estate agent to facilitate the process. However, the homeowner often puts too much faith in the real estate professional to protector their belongings. This is a big mistake and a false sense of security.
No offense to the real estate professionals, many of them don’t really understand what they should and shouldn’t do in regards to “securing” your stuff.
I present about 50 programs a year to real estate agents on this topic. I always ask “what would you do if you saw someone steal something?” Inevitably I get responses where agents would say “I’d tell them to put it back!” Alrighty then. While this is the “right thing to do” it’s not the right thing for the agent to do. Because now the thief has to decide how bad they want the stuff and they now have to determine what it’s going to take to keep it. Giving a thief an ultimatum may result in violence.
The Aldergrove Star reports “These crimes are committed by thieves posing as potential homebuyers attending open houses or walking through homes for sale with a realtor. The thieves will distract the realtor, perhaps asking for a tape measure, and while the realtor facilitates the request, property is pocketed. Property targeted during these thefts includes laptops, jewelry, designer purses, small electronics, and other miscellaneous items.”
Real estate agents should not consider themselves in any way “security guards”. The home owner in no way should consider agents responsible for protecting their stuff. If you are a homeowner or a real estate agent, have a discussion that includes the following tips:
- Hide or remove your valuables and medications. If it can be easily stolen and has resale street value, then remove it.
- Request your real estate agent bring additional agents. There is always strength in numbers.
- Protect yourself from identity theft. Remove or lock up bills, credit card receipts and bank statements.
- If anyone ever steals something and you see them, run out of that home as fast as possible. If a person is crazy enough to steal from an open house, then they are crazy enough to commit violence. There is nothing of monetary value on the planet that I would fight for.
- Put signage out saying “Property Under Video Surveillance”
- Always check the security status of home security systems, doors and windows before and after a showing. Make sure they are all locked and the hinges are still in the doors.
Robert Siciliano personal security expert to ADT Home Security Source discussing Home Security and Identity Theft on TBS Movie and a Makeover. Disclosures.
Similar Posts
- Home Security Tips When Selling Your House
Selling a home is a big task requiring lots of time and effort. Most people use a professional real estate agent to help them sell (which I recommend), but many today are doing it themselves. When opening your home to strangers the risks to your families’ personal security increase dramatically.
First and foremost recognize
- Convicted Burglar; Police Offer Tips for Keeping Home Secure
Robert Siciliano Identity Theft Expert
When it comes to breaking into homes, the best experts are the ones who know everything about the process, the burglars themselves.
The burglar in this story, is on probation for a September 2008 burglary conviction, but admits he burglarized 30 or 40 homes to feed a drug addiction.” When I was
- Woman Becomes Victim of Craigslist Scam
I have a love/hate relationship with Craigslist. I love the occasional deal I get (like the 25 hp outboard motor I just got) and I love how people use it to find stuff I’m selling or renting out (like an apartment). But I hate the way some people completely over price what they are selling,
- Identity Theft – Common Consumer Errors
The major problem that consumers face today is a fundamental lack of understanding of what identity theft actually is. Most people think of identity theft as when someone uses your credit card without your permission. Fraudulent credit card use is certainly a multibillion dollar problem, but it’s only one small part of the identity theft
- Brazen Burglars Broke into the Same House Three Times in a Week
In the first hit they made off with a television and four-figure sum of cash, plus a key to the garden shed.
They came back, let themselves into the shed, and took garden tools but were spotted by the returning home owners.
The GazzetteNews reported the homeowner investigated after noticing the shed door was open, and saw
Leave a Comment