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Vandalism–Damage to businesses property or vehicles
Vandalism–Damage to customer’s property or vehicles
- Drives business away to “safer” competitors
Burglaries–After hour break-ins/theft
- Comprises 3% of US business crime cost, $14.7
billion
- Burglary amounts to $858 million in Florida
business crime cost
Robberies–Armed demand for cash
- Fueled by the ever growing drug problem
- Motivated by the ability to get quick cash
- Overloaded criminal justice system
- Armed robber's only fear is of being caught
- Armed robberies average over $2,000 per incident
Short Stories:
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In the wake of a parking garage shooting this spring, Baltimore County Maryland is considering legislation requiring big-box retail stores to install digital video surveillance camera systems in their parking lots.
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Vandals cost the Dubuque Community School District $114,000 when they sliced the brake lines on 31 school buses.
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The intruder looked like he belonged. He walked into
the business, nicely dressed, and smiled at
the staff. They smiled back. He strolled away,
popped into an office, and walked out with a
laptop tucked under his arm. Nobody noticed.
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At a customer service center, a thief waited until
dark, broke in, opened the computers, and left
with the hard drives. Gone was the customer
information database.
“Security is no longer a luxury
to many businesses. With theft costing U.S. employers
billions of dollars a year, and assaults and threats
of violence against Americans at work numbering about
2 million cases a year, workplace security has emerged
as a key concern of companies seeking to protect their
employees, assets, and data.” Scripps Howard
News 2/05
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