Rick
Well-known member
- Joined
- Sep 4, 2003
- Messages
- 1,680
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Better yet.... How long did it take you to make it your pet??--M. said:How would you fit one of those in there?
Better yet.... How long did it take you to make it your pet??--M. said:How would you fit one of those in there?
DaveSunRa said:My vote would be to have a mad pet bull in the car, just waiting.
skimom said:That sucks, Sabrina. I'm so sorry that it happened to you.
Question... was the car gone thru ? I mean, were things moved around and apparently looked through ?
Putting the wallets and valuables under the seats or out of reach of the "windows" is the way to go. These are probably just junkies out for a cowardly grab of your hard earned stuff. I wanted to explain just how they do this (broken window, but some stuff left intact that is out of range of that window), but some fellow posters were afraid we would give away some car break-in secrets. Believe Me, they already know. I don't think they read read the blogs, if they or their family had a computer, it would have been sold long ago for a quick fix.una_dogger said:Nope, everything inside just as it was left. Zero ransacking. FWIW, the wallets were buried under the front seats, and the minimal gear left behind was stashed under a dirty dog bed and dirty sweater in the way back. The window that was broken was not near the lumpy dog bed nor was it the front where the auto locks for all the doors is accessed. Unless he/she was after my Gazeteer's or dirty sneakers, there was no reason to crack that window. That is unless they didn't feel like getting glass on thier own car if it was the truck, who was parked next to me on the opposite side.
When I spoke to the State Police, they asked alot of questions about the truck, and the officer commented that it was possible that *we* interrupted the robbery.
Breeze said:Every teenager, young adult and miscreant in the North Country knows this. They pretty well know exactly who ( by name) is on patrol, what shift this week, and which direction the patrol cars were going when last seen. Not many troopers, a lot of local knowledge, and cell phones in every pocket. 4 guys in a car at night = 4 cell phones on screech.
Breeze
They're looking for cash, not even electronics in most cases, and I'm sure they don't expect drugs . This is small town America, and electronics and other personal stuff is harder to "fence" and makes it easier to get caught, while cash is easy, every dealer takes it!! Even if they are stopped down the road while leaving the scene, how can anyone prove who's $20 bill it is, while an iPod might put them in jail!!Maddy said:The cash definitely but do they think that all hikers are drug addicts who left their heroine, crack cocaine or methamphetamines in the car?
That doesn't even make sense.
I knew that was coming!skiguy said:May I suggest something ...
Waumbek said:An interesting, if impassioned, analysis, Breeze. I would certainly agree that local police do not have the necessary staff or resources to cover all the trailheads in an effective manner. As for the sociology and demographics you cite, I don't have enough knowledge to assess your argument. Some of it sounds right. Respectfully, what is distinctly wrong is your broad-brush "profiling" above of North Country teenagers. Many, I would venture most, North Country teenagers have no clue what the police are doing--and no reason even to be curious. It really does not help the immediate problem to demonize them all. Suggestions about "not feeding the bears/trolls/thieves" are much more useful, as are creative ideas about hiker shuttles. The underlying problems will take years to solve.
Tom Rankin said:Sabrina, sorry about your car!
I wonder how many people this really happens to. Was there a poll about this a while back?
Waumbek said:The underlying problems will take years to solve.
Breeze said:The Town of Berlin NH is becoming known as the easiest place in New England to get every/ any manner of welfare/assistance ever known. That is a new translation ( for me) of " live free or die".
I agree that leaving valuables in cars is a bad idea that will only encourage more break-ins, and writing online that you always leave your wallet is worse. But I'm not sure what is bad about identifying problem trailheads, the bad guys will find them from a map or just driving around.Waumbek said:One thing that will definitely help is not to advertise on boards like this that hikers are leaving wallets full of money and expensive gear in cars at remote trailheads--and, more importantly, NEVER to leave them in cars anywhere. LNW--leave no wallets--should be the hiker credo that petty thieves see when they read VFTT. They should also not find a list of popular trailheads to raid--the "where my car got jacked" anecdotes--when they read VFTT. It's sufficient to put out a general notice that you were hiking in the Whites and came back to find car windows smashed as a reminder to others that parking lots in the Whites are not wilderness and should be treated like any city street.
Last I knew, Troop E in Tamworth covered most of Carroll County excluding Harts Location.Breeze said:The New Hampshire State Police Barracks in Twin Mountain IS the Local Police for the area bordering the entire WMNF ( absent city or town PD) and a ways beyond, with help from the County Sherriff's.
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The Town of Berlin NH is becoming known as the easiest place in New England to get every/ any manner of welfare/assistance ever known.
David Metsky said:Thieves aren't looking for hiking/camping gear - too difficult to sell and they have no idea what is good. Electronics, cash, jewelry.
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