.
Feedback

Don't Let Mailman's Gift Get Stolen

Personally deliver your holiday gifts to the mailman, newspaper delivery person, trash and recycling people so thieves don't usurp the presents.

Criminals don't care what season it is, so don't leave intriguing items in plain sight to be stolen, that's the lesson the Monterey County Sheriff's Office is delivering this month.

According to Crime Specialist Dave Crozier, one common, yet unexpected crime this time of year is theft of gifts left for your everyday visitors — mail carriers, garbage pick-up people, newspaper delivery people, etc. And with an abundance of this type of theft in the south Bay Area, the Monterey County Sheriff's Office wanted to share a word of warning up through California.

"Every year theft reports are made regarding removal of gifts attached to refuse containers and mail boxes," the Sheriff's Office said in a prepared statement. "This shameful and thoughtless act can be stopped."

So if you don't want your cookies, sweater, or whatever you're giving to your daily deliverers to get stolen, think hard about your own method of delivery. 

The Sheriff's Office suggests getting the recipients' home addresses or learning their delivery schedules so you can either mail or hand deliver the gifts you wish to give. 

It's also a good idea to give your delivery folks a heads up that there's a gift coming for them, so if you're hand delivering it they remember to knock on your door instead of leaving your deliverables in the driveway unannounced.

According to the Sheriff's Office, especially "gifts left overnight are a prime target" of thieves.

But criminals aside, winter weather is a great reason not to leave gifts outside in the p.m. Rain is only expected in Burlingame on Friday, Dec. 14 and showers will continue most days through Dec. 26.

Newsletter & Alerts

Get the best stories each day and important breaking news

Subscribe

Not from Burlingame-Hillsborough Patch? Find your Local Patch »

Note Article
Just a short thought to get the word out quickly about anything in your neighborhood.
Share something with your neighbors. Write a new post... What's up? Make an announcement, speak your mind, or sell something
Tom Eiseman June 6, 2013 at 07:59 am
It's not just you, it's all of us. I'll bet most of us have seen this happen all over town. PeopleRead More don't seem to be in the habit of checking for pedestrians, unless perhaps they're near a school. Drivers need to understand that they must watch, yield and wait. In large cities where there may be dozens of people in an intersection, drivers, for the most part, observe the law--there's safety in numbers. So when we're alone or in a small group, and find ourselves in a crosswalk around here, we all must remain alert and be ready to "jump out of the way" of some unobservant or inconsiderate driver.