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Weekly Crime Report for Southeast Torrance


This report is for Sunday, November 13, 2016 through Saturday, November 19, 2016.
There were 62 incidents reported to Torrance Police during the reporting period.
The report is late due to the Thanksgiving holiday.
 
RESIDENTIAL BURGLARIES
There were 2 in Torrance, 1 in North Torrance and 1 in the Seaside Ranchos area.
 
AUTO BURGLARIES
There were 16 in Torrance and 3 in Southeast Torrance.
11 14 8:15 PM to 11 15 7 AM         1800 Block 245th St (Falena) Unlocked Vehicle
11 15 5 PM      to 11 16 7:45 AM    2000 Block Reynosa Dr (Cabrillo) Entry by unknown means
11 17 3 PM       to 11 18 1 AM         1800 Block Schilling Court (Walnut) Unlocked Vehicle
6 vehicles were unsecured, 5 vehicles windows smashed for entry and 2 unknown means for entry.
Items stolen from vehicles:
Stereo,work id badge, bank bag-cash, stereo, speakers, vehicles battery, third row seats, duffel bag,
shoes, cash, sunglasses, laptop,  backpack, blood pressure machine, keys, tool bag, tools, cash, gift
cards, suitcase, tool bag, nailer, screw gun, compressor, drill bits, checkbook laptop, medication, wallet
leaf flower, clothes, tools, food and candy,.
 
AUTO THEFT
There were 10 stolen vehicles in Torrance including 2 in Southeast Torrance. 
A 2017 Mercedes Benz S550 was stolen on 11 15 at 2:06PM from the 3300 Block of Pacific Coast Highway.
11 16 5:06 PM 2000 Block 242nd St (Huber)  2011 Honda Civic
11 16 5:07 PM 2000 Block 242nd St (Huber)  2007 BMW 328
 
THEFT
There were 18 incidents of theft reported in Torrance including 1 in Southeast Torrance.
11 18 2:30 PM to 11 19 7:3 0AM  23300 Huber Avenue  Tailgate stolen from parked vehicle.
3 tailgates and 1 catalytic converter were stolen during the reporting period.
 
John Bailey, President
Southeast Torrance Homeowners’ Association, Inc. (SETHA)
 
 
Tips from the Foster City Police Department on preventing auto burglaries.

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One crime you can really help us prevent is auto-burglary. Almost all auto-burglaries have one thing in common: something to steal. That is, something valuable left in the car, often in plain sight of a passing burglar. Many auto-burglaries are "crimes of opportunity". These crimes can often be avoided if simple preventative steps are taken.
It takes less than 30 seconds to break into a car, grab what is in plain view, check the usual hiding places for other items, and get away. How long would it take you to secure your valuables out of sight? Even less time. Auto-burglary prevention, like all crime prevention, involves limiting the criminal's ability and/or opportunity to commit the crime.
With very little time and effort, you can make a huge difference in your vulnerability to auto-burglary. We suggest taking these simple but important steps to avoid being a victim of auto burglary:
  • Don't leave valuables in your car. That sounds like "common sense", but drivers/passengers do leave items of value in plain view every day. If you leave valuable items visible in your car, your car is automatically a target. Thieves are targeting purses, laptops, GPS units and MP3 players, which are easily sold.
  • Additionally, computers, purses and wallets are highly desired targets that are stolen, to commit identity theft.
  • If you must leave valuable items in your car while out and about, place items out of sight before reaching your destination or move them inconspicuously. Someone may be watching when you put items under a seat or throw something over them. An opportunistic thief is on the lookout for trunk-packing, and can break into your car the minute you're out of sight. One reason SUVs and pickups are common auto-burglary targets is because they don't have a "trunk" to hold valuables — the driver/passenger generally just "hides" their valuables "out of sight". The thieves know this, and do check glove compartments, behind seats, and under seats. It only takes a few seconds to check all the "usual" hiding places.
  • Unobtrusively locking everything valuable "in the trunk" (if you have one) may be difficult when you're combining errands at multiple destinations. Certainly avoid leaving packages or shopping bags visible in your car — lock them in the trunk out of sight if you have to leave packages in your car unattended. Plan your shopping/errands so that you don't load your trunk until you are ready to drive to another destination.
  • Never open a trunk, fill it full of valuables, close it, and then just walk away.
  • Keep your car in good operating condition and always have plenty of gas to get "there and back" (it costs no more to keep the top quarter of the tank filled than to keep the bottom quarter-tank filled!); you don't want to have to leave your car (and valuable contents) sitting along the side of the road if that can be avoided.
  • Once home, unload your valuables immediately. Do not store valuables in your car any longer than necessary, and certainly never overnight.
  • If your trunk can be opened from inside your car without a key, lock this feature when you are not in your car or have it disabled,
  • if possible. Leave no trace. Don't leave any "sign" that there might be valuables "out of sight" in your vehicle, such as docking stations or connector cables. Just leaving an empty docking station in plain sight, even if you've taken the high dollar component with you, may end up costing you hundreds of dollars to replace a broken window because the thief wanted to check your car for "hidden" valuables.
  • Very few auto break-ins are "random" — the thieves see "something" in plain sight that's valuable, or hints of possible hidden valuables. Leave nothing in "plain sight" that might make your vehicle worth "investigating" by a thief; not even loose coins or a CD.
  • If you have an after-market stereo/CD-player with a removable faceplate, remove it. Without the faceplate, the unit is less attractive/useful to many thieves, and harder to "fence." If the unit can be pulled, pull it! Take it with you. Just covering a valuable radio (or ANY valuables in your car) with something (like a blanket or towel) to hide it will probably only draw thieves' attention.
  • Try to park in busy, well-traveled areas and well-lighted areas. Large anonymous lots are hit by thieves much more often than parking immediately adjacent to residential housing or other occupied buildings. Auto-burglars prefer breaking into cars where they will not be observed or attract attention, and choose their targets accordingly.
  • Lock ALL your vehicle's doors even if you plan to be gone for only a brief time. Every month, we have items stolen from unlocked vehicles where the owner was only going to be gone "just for a second." It only takes seconds to steal your stuff! It's not at all uncommon for thieves to walk down a row of parked vehicles and check vehicle doors to see if they are unlocked. Don't leave any window open or even cracked open, including vent/wing windows and sunroofs.
  • Set any alarm or anti-theft device. If you have one, use it! Many people believe that car-alarms no longer make a difference, but they can be an effective deterrent to an auto-burglar, who most often chooses the easiest target. If they have two cars to choose from, one with a visible indicator of an alarm system and one without, they will likely burglarize the one without (unless you've left out valuables just too good to ignore!). Locking your car and setting your alarm is just part of the solution. Even if locked and alarmed, if you leave valuables (or the hint of valuables) in plain sight, a thief may target your car, even knowing it's locked and alarmed. But, without a clear prize in sight, a locked/alarmed car will likely be bypassed for an easier "target of opportunity."
  • Don't think your dark tinted windows will hide your valuables. Thieves often use flashlights to see through tint, and after-market tint is handy to keep all the broken glass in one "sheet" when they break out your window (and toss the broken window into your back seat or passenger seat to hide the evidence of the break-in from passerbys).
  • Don't use "hide-a-keys." Thieves know the best places to hide those.
  • Remember, just "locking" isn't enough. Keep your car OFF the target list of the thieves by keeping all hints of valuables totally out of sight. If they see something tempting, they certainly can break in.
  • As a last line of defense (not really to prevent theft as much as to aid in recovery), mark your valuables. Recording serial numbers is important so the stolen items can be entered into a Nation-wide stolen property system.
  • A serial number doesn't directly link you to your stolen property. We'd suggest inscribing/engraving a personal identifier on all valuables. Don't use your social security number (identity theft) — use your driver's license (DL) number, prefaced by your DL "state", such as "CA-N1234567". With that marking, any police officer can trace your valuable back to you, wherever it's recovered, and the chances of being reunited with your stolen valuables is dramatically increased.
What do you do if something is stolen out of your car? As soon as you notice something's stolen (or that your car has been broken into) do not touch/adjust anything in, on, or around the car. As soon as possible, call the police department having jurisdiction for the location the car is parked at to report the incident.

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