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Nassau police team fights back as home burglaries spike
A police car sits across the street from the 1st Precinct of Nassau County Police Department in Baldwin in this 2013 file photo. (Credit: Steve Pfost)
Residential burglaries have spiked 28 percent in Nassau County this year, prompting police to start a task force aimed at stemming the crime outbreak.
The new Burglary Pattern Team, comprising four detectives and a detective sergeant, began operating in mid-January as burglaries increased and is focused exclusively on “highly organized” burglary rings that use “professional methods,” said Nassau Chief of Detectives Kevin Smith.
“Burglaries are traumatic for people,” Smith said. “Someone has violated your space.”
As of March 9, Nassau police recorded 172 residential burglaries across the county — up from the 134 in the same time period in 2015, a 28 percent increase, according to department statistics.
Residential burglaries rose in all but one of the department’s six police precinct areas, including a 51 percent increase in the Second Precinct, which saw 44 residential burglaries this year through the end of last month versus the 28 at the same time last year, department statistics show.
A number of factors could be fueling the increase, such as the region’s heroin epidemic and simply thieves seeing opportunity in affluent communities, Smith said.
Overall, major crime is down about 1 percent over the same time last year. But the burglary spike comes as the department has also seen an increase in street robberies and felony assaults from last year at this time.
“Burglaries account for a significant percentage of our crime index,” said acting Police Commissioner Thomas Krumpter. “It’s an invasive crime, and we wanted to take a different approach toward reducing the burglaries in the county.”
The pattern burglaries team was created on Jan. 11 and its members have collectively 87 years of experience in areas such as the robbery and narcotics squads, and one detective worked previously in the NYPD’s major case squad, Smith said.
The team uses predictive analysis, surveillance and coordinates with the Intelligence Unit and other area police departments. Using these tools, it has already made arrests in half its caseload.
So far, the team has solved two of the four patterns of crimes, which date back to 2015, and closed another three patterns of the six patterns that occurred this year. Each pattern consists of five to nine burglaries, Smith said.
At the same time residential burglaries have gone up, commercial burglaries are down 26 percent — there were 67 so far this year and 91 in the same time period last year.
The discrepancy between residential burglaries rising and commercial burglaries decreasing may be attributed to property owners taking stronger security measures at their businesses, Smith said.
Homeowners also need to be more cognizant of the need to secure their properties and install alarms, floodlights and motion detectors, he said.
“It’s time to beef up your security at your own home,” Smith said he would advise homeowners.
The residential burglary surge comes as street robberies and felony assaults are also on the rise. As of March 9, felony assaults were up countywide by 21 percent, according to department statistics reporting there were 67 this year and 55 during the same time period last year.
Street robberies have also risen 44 percent, with 68 this year and 47 in the same time period through March 9 last year, department statistics show. “Street robberies are up as well; what drives that? It’s hard to say,” Smith said. “Is some of it fueled by the heroin problem that we’re having right now? It could be. But we’re making a lot of headway.”
The felony assaults, Smith said, are in some cases part of street robberies and are sometimes gang-related, drug-fueled or young people engaged in confrontations.
There doesn’t appear to be a correlation between the burglaries and assaults, Smith said.
“Most burglars want to get in and out. And they don’t want to confront people. I’ve had experience with going to burglary situations where the homeowner has told you, ‘Yes, I confronted the guy and he dove through a window to get out.’ He doesn’t want the confrontation.”
In one case, the new burglary team arrested a Brooklyn man who they say is responsible for 17 burglaries across Nassau County. And Smith said investigators could charge him with more.
Mamuka Bokuchava, 31, of Brooklyn, who worked as a waiter at the high-end Manhattan restaurant Cipriani, was arrested last month and charged with eight burglaries in Port Washington, two each in East Williston and Williston Park and one in Oyster Bay, East Norwich, New Hyde Park, Manhasset and Mineola.
Task force detectives arrested him after a witness described a vehicle fleeing one of the scenes and investigators used license plate reader technology to identify the likely vehicle owner.
The department would not reveal the detectives’ identities because of the surveillance work they do.
“They work with the precinct detectives and analyze their burglaries and say, ‘You know what, is this part of a bigger pattern, does this go across precinct lines, squad lines, village lines?’ ” Smith said. “And they’ll say, ‘You know, we’re gonna work on that one. We think we can make a dent in that.’ ”
Yes, it was a long time ago. I think it was just kids because nothing of any real value was stolen, just a cheap camera, a piece of costume jewelry (that was in the same jewelry box as the real stuff). My CD case was taken too. Which sucked as there were lots of CD's in there.
My car was broken into once too, they took a duffel bag that had my work clothes in it and a shopping bag that had my Bf's Christmas present in it. I was heartbroken because I didn't have much money but I had saved up enough to get him a coat that he wanted.
It really is an awful feeling when someone has been in your house or car without permission.
One good think I learned from the first incident, is that my instincts are great and I should always listen to them. As soon as I walked in the door I knew something was off, I could just feel it even though the theft wasn't easily apparent.
Our house was broken into when I was 16. Ordinarily, I got home first, as my mother was working part-time. However, that particular day, we were on assembly schedule so we were released about 10-15 minutes later. And I hung around talking to a boy. So when I got home, my mother was home and running out of the house crying and screaming. The police were there dusting for fingerprints, too. They took me in so I could tell them what was missing from my room. The only thing (of mine) they took were my concert tickets. It was my first concert, The Knack. I wrote down the seat/row, etc., on my school folder so I could show the boy who was taking me.
There was an apartment building behind us. The manager's daughter was looking out her window just as the two men were jumping over our fence (leaving our property). She recognized them as tenants. She notified the police, so the police waited for them to return home. That evening they were arrested, and the only thing they still had (of ours) on them were my concert tickets. I was called to testify in a bench trial. The public defender tried to make the judge believe I gave/sold the guys these tickets. The men tried staring me down, but I gave it right back. I was pist.
Apparently these two 17 year old "men" were tried as adults because they had priors. Both were on parole from the California Youth Authority for "good behavior". They had been convicted of murder-3 each, and were armed while in our home. The police believe that if I had come home first, I would have caught them in the act and possibly killed or raped. But since my mother got home first, she (manually) opened the garage door, pulled her car in, brought the trash cans around and threw them over the gate, etc., making her presence known allowing them to escape.
Our pooch was dazed and confused so I suspect they conked her on the noggin to shut her up, or gave her something to make her sleep.
We have not lived without an alarm system ever since.
On another occasion, my mother was home and sitting on the toilet. The doorbell rang and she didn't get to the door. Apparently she forgot to lock the back sliding door, because suddenly the alarm went off, and the door was open several inches. Whoever was breaking in got away.
When I lived alone, I would keep my alarm on even when I was home. I have a tendency to keep it on, too, if I'm home alone and in the shower.
This is why I have no problem with deadly force being used for home defense even if there is little or no likelihood that the owner or their family is in physical danger. It's not just property we're talking about. It's your sense of well being and safety in your own home.
-- Edited by huskerbb on Monday 14th of March 2016 02:23:32 PM
__________________
I'm not arguing, I'm just explaining why I'm right.
Well, I could agree with you--but then we'd both be wrong.
We lived on Staten Island - corner house, 2 very busy streets, complete with traffic light. We kept one of the living room lights on so the kids would be able to navigate the way to the kitchen or bathroom. Total wrap-around porch. 3 dogs, 2 on 2nd floor, 1 on third floor.
We woke up 4 days after Christmas to a frigid downstairs. Youngest DD came running up to our room, yelling that the back door was open, and the window was open in the living room, and she couldn't watch TV because it wasn't there!
DH and I were astounded by how much was missing, and much of what wasn't taken was slashed. Missing from the LR were: 10' entertainment center with TV, radio, turntable, tape recorder, and hundreds of LP records; my (broken) Mikimodo pearls from an ash tray, silver trays. Slashed: 3 arm chairs, love seat, and 2 sofas.
Missing from the DR: silver casseroles, crystal serving pieces, all of the liquor from the bar area, all the silver flatware, miscellaneous silver pieces.
Missing from the kitchen: the entire contents of a full-size upright freezer, freshly butchered hind quarter of beef, everything! And from the refrigerator, a 12-pack of beer, which was distributed throughout the downstairs! Apparently, the thieves entertained themselves while they were robbing us! There were empty/partial bottles all over the downstairs.
Apparently, they were scared off when DH answered a 2:30 a.m. phone call telling us his grandfather had passed away. They left a new can opener, with the cord wrapped around it, on the kitchen table; they grabbed my (fake) fur coat off the kitchen chair, but left my purse which was under it.
They had to have had at least a van or a light truck to haul everything away. Fingerprints never lead to any suspects. My guess is that it was a) drug dealers looking for stuff to sell, or b) someone who was looking to set up a new apartment.
At least none of the kids woke up and confronted them. And the vet said the dogs had all be drugged.
I always eye roll when someone says they are safe because they have a dog or two. It might be a deterrent for the amateur grab and runners, but for the serious thieves, they're an enjoyed challenge.
I always eye roll when someone says they are safe because they have a dog or two. It might be a deterrent for the amateur grab and runners, but for the serious thieves, they're an enjoyed challenge.
Dogs are actually a deterrent. Even the alarm companies will tell you that. And believe it or not, it's not just guard dogs, but the little yappy ankle biters are, too, b/c they won't shut up.
If there is a choice b/t a house with a dog, and one without, they will take the one without.
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LawyerLady
I can explain it to you, but I can't understand it for you.
I always eye roll when someone says they are safe because they have a dog or two. It might be a deterrent for the amateur grab and runners, but for the serious thieves, they're an enjoyed challenge.
Dogs are actually a deterrent. Even the alarm companies will tell you that. And believe it or not, it's not just guard dogs, but the little yappy ankle biters are, too, b/c they won't shut up.
If there is a choice b/t a house with a dog, and one without, they will take the one without.
"Serious" thieves would take one look at our house and KNOW there is nothing of real value inside.
And, believe me, our two Dachshunds can bark up a storm.
This is why I have no problem with deadly force being used for home defense even if there is little or no likelihood that the owner or their family is in physical danger. It's not just property we're talking about. It's your sense of well being and safety in your own home.
-- Edited by huskerbb on Monday 14th of March 2016 02:23:32 PM
My sister walked in on a robbery in TX. The cops asked her husband why he didn't shoot the robbers. I love TX!
I always eye roll when someone says they are safe because they have a dog or two. It might be a deterrent for the amateur grab and runners, but for the serious thieves, they're an enjoyed challenge.
Dogs are actually a deterrent. Even the alarm companies will tell you that. And believe it or not, it's not just guard dogs, but the little yappy ankle biters are, too, b/c they won't shut up.
If there is a choice b/t a house with a dog, and one without, they will take the one without.
"Serious" thieves would take one look at our house and KNOW there is nothing of real value inside.
And, believe me, our two Dachshunds can bark up a storm.
flan
Oh, I believe you.
__________________
LawyerLady
I can explain it to you, but I can't understand it for you.