The
typical lock in most homes will not provide protection against
break-ins. A professional burglar can usually enter your manufactured
home with no more than a plastic credit card or a thin screwdriver.
Give your doors the best resistance to forced entry by installing dead
bolt locks and a reinforcing strike plate with 3-inch screws. If you
secure your doors with double-keyed dead bolt locks, make sure you have
ready access to the key from inside if an emergency demands you exit
quickly.
Arrange to have newspapers, magazines, mail and other
regular deliveries stopped. Ask a neighbor to pick up any flyers that
are thrown on your drive or lawn. Old newspapers and overflowing mail
are a clear indication that you're not home. Also make arrangements to
have your lawn mowed. Ask a neighbor or hire a landscape service to
assure it will be done regularly.
Buy and use a few inexpensive
electronic timers. Don't set the timers so all the lights are turned on
or off at one time. Or, use random access timers that automatically
change the time your lights go on and off each evening. Burglars watch
for unusual patterns, such as total darkness in your home. Variations
in lighting patterns look more natural to an outside observer.
Give
your park manager the dates when you'll be gone, phone numbers where
you can be reached, and your trip itinerary. Ask your immediate
neighbors to contact the police if they spot unusual activity around
your home. Don't leave a message that you're on vacation on your
answering machine message. Just say you can't answer their call right
then, but suggest leaving a message. Many machines can be set up so you
can retrieve messages even when you're away from home. Answering
machines that don't give away your plans are a good idea, since a phone
ringing on and on can also be a tip to burglars that no one's home.
Store
small valuables such as silverware or jewelry in a safe deposit box.
Hide TVs, stereo components, computers, VCRs, or other large valuables
in an inconspicuous closet. The idea is to keep expensive items out of
view from the street or yard.
Protect sliding glass windows or
doors with anti-jimmy bars that can be laid in slider tracks to prevent
them from being opened. You can also install a second lock on the
sliding panel of the door. Pin door hinges on exterior doors so they
can't be removed, even with the hinge posts out. Also, make sure you
protect storage sheds with a heavy-duty lock. Locks with
steel-reinforced shanks are more difficult to break than other types.
If you have a door with glass panes, install grille work or take other
measures to prevent a thief from breaking the glass, reaching in and
opening the door from the inside.
In addition, don't broadcast
your vacation plans. A recent ten-year study of home burglaries by the
U.S. Justice Department discovered that a startling 42 percent of
apprehended burglars were known by the victim. The fewer people you
tell about your being away, the safer your home will be.
provided by MyGreatHome.com