Date: Fri 09-Aug-1996
Date: Fri 09-Aug-1996
Publication: Bee
Author: ANDYG
Quick Words:
Burglar-alarms-internet
Full Text:
sidebar for story on burglar alarms
B Y A NDREW G OROSKO
In a growing town where most new homes have burglar alarms installed, false
burglar alarms are a growing problem.
Last year, the town received 2,223 burglar alarms from homes and businesses,
but only 11 of those alarms involved actual burglaries.
The other 2,212 burglar alarms were false alarms.
To learn how other municipalities across the country deal with their false
burglar alarm problems, Patrolman James Mooney and Police Records Supervisor
Robert Berkins decided it was worth connecting to the Internet to do some
research on the topic.
Logging onto The International Association of Chiefs of Police (IACP) home
page on the World Wide Web section of the Internet, Patrolman Mooney found a
web link for the IACP Private Sector Liaison Committee. Clicking onto that
link displayed a web page with a list of publications on public safety.
One of the categories listed is "false alarm perspectives." The listing is
intended to provide solutions for police departments seeking help with false
alarm problems.
The primary contributors to the web listing are the National Burglar and Fire
Alarm Association, the Central Station Alarm Association, and the Security
Industry Association.
The information gleaned from the Internet will aid town officials in modifying
the town's burglar alarm ordinance, Mr Berkins said.
Patrolman Mooney said he retrieved the data on false alarms from his home
computer which is linked to the Internet. The computer network holds a wealth
of pertinent information on the topic from both the public and private
sectors, he said.
The information obtained from the Internet includes court decisions as they
concern false alarms, as well as data about fines for false alarms, he said.
The computer information search was launched to learn how to lower the rate of
local false alarms and how to improve the town's false alarm ordinance, he
said.
Much data relevant to police work and law enforcement is available on the
Internet, he said.
Police Chief James Lysaght, Jr, wants to obtain a computer connection to the
Internet at the police station, Mr Berkins said.
Reviewing information about false burglar alarms on the Internet indicates
that the problem isn't unique to Newtown, but is a nationwide problem,
Patrolman Mooney said.
