PHUKET
CRIME
Wednesday, January 18, 2006
Spate of burglaries in Cherng TalayCHERNG TALAY: Police
are warning foreign residents with expensive homes
to take greater security measures following a wave
of burglaries that has seen some homes broken into
as many as five times.
Cherng Talay Police Deputy Superintendent Pol Lt Col
Suwat Kaewphrom told the Gazette today that there
had been continuing reports of burglaries, but that
the incidence of the break-ins was not unusually high.
However, some homes had been targeted on multiple
occasions, and most of these belonged to foreigners,
he said.
“It is part of Western culture that people don’t like
to build high walls or fences around their properties,”
he said, adding that the construction of expensive
but poorly secured homes close to low-income public
housing has created a situation ripe for thievery.
The burglars study the movements of police patrols
making their rounds and are therefore able to avoid
detection by the police, he added.
“Some homes have been burgled many times. This is
because they are in quiet areas and are easy to break
into. We tell the home-owners they can’t rely solely
on the police, and advise them to install security
systems such as alarms and closed-circuit TV cameras,”
he said.
“We can’t catch every thief, nor can we assign all
of our officers exclusively to areas where the break-ins
are occurring because we have to police the entire
district.”
Local residents have become exasperated and fearful
at the increasingly brazen tactics of the thief or
thieves, who come into their bedrooms at night while
they are sleeping and rummage through bedroom drawers
looking for cash and other valuables small enough
to carry off.
One couple living in a detached home near Laguna told
the Gazette that their home was first burgled last
June, with 10,000 baht and a mobile phone being stolen.
They were burgled again in early December, the thieves
making off with the equivalent of 100,000 baht in
foreign currencies.
There have been three more break-ins since then, with
the thieves taking smaller amounts of cash. Most,
though not all, of the break-ins occurred at night.
“One night they walked right into the house at 11
am. My girlfriend woke up and they ran off. Then they
returned late the same night and stole 100 baht from
right inside the bedroom while we were asleep,” the
owner said.
The couple have since bought a dog and are planning
to install sensors, floodlights and other home security
devices.
Several neighboring houses had been broken into, along
with homes in the nearby Lakeshore housing development,
he said.
An American couple who have lived in the area for
five years told the Gazette that their home was broken
into once. The thieves came in through an open window
in the early hours of Christmas morning and stole
a laptop computer and three teddy bears belonging
to the couple’s children.
“That confused us. They weren’t even new teddy bears,”
said the wife.
“It’s very disturbing, especially the idea that someone’s
been in the same room with you… this person is very
light-footed. They are either unbelievably desperate
or unbelievably bold,” she said.
“Several other houses in the area were burgled before
us... they seem to be looking mostly for cash and
small things. It all seems to happen while people
are at home. I think it’s being done by the same person.
“I know of four houses, all near us, that were broken
into before ours. Now they [the thief or thieves]
seem to have moved to Lakeshore, where I have heard
there were seven break-ins recently.
“We have a dog now. Everybody around here seems to
be getting dogs,” she said.
Phuket Tourist Police Inspector Pol Maj Bundit Khaosutham
told the Gazette that burglaries of homes fall outside
the responsibilities of his unit.
“Even if we get a report of a break-in all we can
do is provide translation services. The investigation
is the responsibility of the local police station,”
he said.
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