Author Archives: Beth Williams

Paris Pickpockets and scams in paris

With over 2.2 million city residents and millions of tourists, it is easy to see how this crowded city can make a petty thief rich. If you travel there you should know how to avoid pickpockets in Paris.  The US Embassy reports that major sites such as the Eiffel Tower, Notre Dame, and the Champs-Elysées are prime hunting grounds for Paris pickpockets who work near these tourist attractions. Additional areas where travelers need to be vigilant of pickpocket scams in Paris include metro trains, monuments, trains, train stations, hotels, airports, and parks.

Where Pickpockets Lurk in Paris

There is never enough time to truly discover Paris. From the breathtaking sites of the Eiffel Tower, Arc de la Triomphe, the Louvre, Sacre Coeur, and to the romantic walkways along the Seine River or narrow streets on the Cité Island, there are many reasons for travelers to explore the Paris to the city limits. Because there is a large concentration of museums, monuments, and parks in proximity, it creates the perfect hunting ground for petty thieves and pickpockets in Paris. The following tourist sites are frequented by pickpockets and other thieves: Madeleine, Arc de Triomphe, Champs, Sacre, L’Opera, George Pompidou Center, Porte de Clingnancourt flea market, and the Eiffel Tower.

Pickpocket Scams at Paris Museums and Monuments

The following is a list of typical Paris pocket picker scams that are reported around local museums and monuments.

  • No place in Paris is safe from the skillful, delicate hand of a pickpocket. While touring the Musee D’Orsay you may notice fellow tourists and even Parisians examining the superb collection of art, including the young, unknown man dressed in khaki trousers, a pink, Polo button-down shirt with a large camera hanging from his neck. You and the man must be walking through the museum at the same pace because he keeps accidentally bumping into you. After viewing the treasures of the museum, you start to make your way out and notice that your bag is unzipped and open. In fact, your wallet is missing. The fellow tourist was not only examining the exhibitions; he was also examining you.
  • The Eiffel Tower is probably the area with the most pickpockets and swindlers. The grounds below the tower are open and quite large. In 2009, 6.6 million visitors took in the world-class views from the top deck. With millions of travelers carrying valuables such as money, cameras, purses, etc., it is no wonder that a man would spend his entire day there zipping around on rollerblades and grabbing whatever he can. Because of the rollerblades, he can escape quickly and never be caught.
  • There are even small, organized gangs that operate on the Eiffel Tower grounds. They may be selling miniature statues of the Eiffel Tower or other souvenirs. When you try to pay for the trinket, one of the “salesmen” grabs your purse, wallet or waist pack and runs away. Although there is a police presence to protect visitors from these occurrences, the thieves have learned to outsmart the police by throwing the stolen goods from member to member until they disappear.

Solution: If you are interested in purchasing a souvenir from a street vendor, after selecting the item and agreeing on a price, step back from the group; discreetly remove the needed money and return to pay. Try to maintain a distance from the salesmen, so that your items are not within hand’s reach. Also, keep small change for these sorts of purchases separate from your passport and wallet. Do not expect street vendors to make change for you.

Tips to Avoid Pickpockets in Paris

  1. Always be aware of your surroundings. When observing the sites, make sure to also observe those around you. If you find yourself in a crowded area, such as an elevator, keep an eye or hand on all of your belongings.
  2. Take only what you need for the day, the rest should stay in your hotel safe or in a portable safe in your room.
  3.  Guard your valuables (passport, credit card, phone) with an anti-theft waist pack or hidden underclothing waist wallet.
  4. Bring no more cash (Euros) than what you expect to spend and only one credit card, your second backup credit card be stored in your safe.
  5. If wearing a purse only wear it crossbody style, and make sure it has a locking zipper.
  6. Do not place anything in your back pocket, only use your front pocket, or better yet use a money belt you tuck into the front of your pants.

Additional Paris Pickpocket Scams

  • Most travelers expect thieves to be gangs of men. However, there are also small groups of women who eagerly await the daily arrival of new visitors. A woman or group of women may approach you with a sign or even text on a piece of paper. The text may be in French or even English. While you take a look at what is on the paper, one of the other women will take a look at what valuables you are carrying and grab what they can. This is the classic distraction technique.
  • There are many, often long lines to enter the Eiffel Tower. While waiting in line (between 15 minutes and 2 hours), you notice two teenage girls greeting the people in line. They seem very nice and approach you by saying, “Hello”, while gently touching your shoulder from the front. As she touches you from the front, you don’t notice the other girl taking your belongings from behind.
  • Once you finally enter the lobby to take the elevators to the top of the Eiffel Tower, you are safe, right? No. Per the Overseas Security Advisory Council, thieves take advantage of the crowded conditions

  • A must see is the Louvre. With an exhibition area of 652,300 square feet, you could spend years in the Louvre and still not see everything. In 2008, 8.5 million guests visited the vast collection. Next to the Louvre Place is the Garden of Tuileries, making this a very big tourist attraction. What attracts tourists will always attract pickpockets. University-aged students may attempt to collect signatures for a cause from the hundreds of tourists waiting in line. It seems like a prime opportunity to gather many signatures in a short amount of time. It is also a prime opportunity to be robbed with your hands and eyes occupied with the petition.
  • People may also campaign for relief for third-world countries by asking for small donations. Once you stop to learn more, a group of people surrounds you and attempts to lure more money or simply take what they want. This and the previous signature scam can occur all over the city, including The Louvre, Garden of Tuileries and on the Champs-Elysées.
  • An iconic site in Paris is the Cathedral of Notre Dame. The cathedral is especially popular for visitors taking a city bus tour. There is a large, open square in front of Notre Dame that provides a fantastic resting place to enjoy the weather and the gothic architecture. While relaxing in the square, a fellow traveler asks if you can help translate a flyer for a café. While you examine the text, his accomplice makes off with your camera bag. This pickpocket method of distraction is performed by men, women, and even small children.
  • Once you arrive at Notre Dame, you notice that there is a very long line to enter. You contemplate if you should stand in line, and a person approaches you offering to sell you tickets to enter the cathedral. You purchase two tickets and wait in line only to find out that there is no entrance fee. If you do want to climb the staircase to the top of the cathedral, you can pay at the desk inside the cathedral.
  • After taking in the views from the top of the cathedral, you make your way down and exit. As you walk out the door, a blind man bumps into you. You are distracted by the waving of his cane as he tries to find his balance. Later at a café, you realize that your money is missing. The blind man was not blind at all. When he bumped into you, he quickly made a grab for the cash in your pocket.
  • Deaf and Dumb Trick. A young or old man or woman approaches you indicating that they are deaf and dumb.  She has a clipboard. It looks like a petition. You sign your name. She asks you for money as you just signed a pledge to give a donation. It is written minimum 10 euros.  Almost always, the people are not deaf, they just pretend to be – which you may observe if you stand back and watch them for a while.  The best response to these types of situations is to say simply”no thank you” and walk away.

Solution: Try to keep a distance from strangers. If someone bumps into you, check your pockets and bags immediately.

More Paris Pickpocket Scams

  • Settled on a hilltop in the Montmartre neighborhood is the stunning Basilica of the Sacre Coeur. This is an excellent location to view the city from above, especially when lit at night. While taking a peek inside of the Basilica, a man lightly bumps into you as you are admiring a statue. Startled, you look at the man, and then out of the corner of your eye, you catch the movement of the man’s hand in your purse.
  • The steps in front of the Sacre Coeur are a popular hangout for young people and tourists. As you search for a good place to rest on the steps, a man approaches and offers to perform a “let’s be friends” trick.  Americans love to be loved and hate to be embarrassed in public, which makes them a perfect target for this type of scam.  The man who approached you innocently asks if you’ll help him  (or her) with a “demonstration” for other curious tourists.  The scammer proceeds to scam artists and tourists make a “friendship bracelet” right on your wrist.  But when he’s finished, you’re suddenly and unexpectedly asked to pay for this simple string bracket.  Since you can’t easily take it off, you pay up to avoid creating a scene in front of the crowd.
  • Another version of the string bracelet being tied around the wrist starts off the same way, but this time you are confused because this is no trick and
  •  once the bracelet is tied, the man can see if you are wearing a watch and steal it, or a group of friends quickly surround you and demand money for the bracelet, you are forced to “pay-
    Avoid paris pickpocket scams

    Thieves and Pickpockets Prey on Tourists in Crowds

    up” for the bracelet in order to get your watch back.  Stay clear of anyone trying to approach you with the bracelet scam.

  • Famous artists such as Claude Monet, Vincent van Gogh, and Pablo Picasso once had studios in the Montmartre neighborhood. Today tourists can still visit the tiny streets and the decadent bistros of this hilltop quarter. A local artist may even approach you offering to sketch a caricature of you. After much convincing, you finally agree. The artist has indeed sketched a very fun portrait, and after he charges you a steep price of 50 Euros.
  • You decided to visit the Centre Pompidou to see what the controversy is about – some people find the contemporary style to be an eyesore and some truly appreciate it. You sit down on a bench outside of the center, and another person sits down on the same bench, but behind you and facing the opposite direction. The pickpocket then carefully slides their hands into your jacket pocket and steals everything inside. They then quickly disappear into the crowd.

Solution: When you sit, you cannot feel the weight of your heavy pockets or bags. This makes it easier for a petty thief to take what he wants without you noticing. Try to keep belongings out of sight from others. If this is not possible, hold them in front of you, or in eye’s sight when taking a rest.

Additionally, never purchase anything without agreeing to a price beforehand. There are many pickpockets and swindlers in this area, so beware.

Pickpockets Scams in Paris Neighborhoods and In-between

The city of Paris is split into districts or quarters. Many of these neighborhoods are unique and attract many visitors. The Marais, Les Halles, Latin Quarter, Republique and especially the Pigalle quarter are areas where travelers should pay special attention to their belongings.

  • While walking through the streets of “Old Paris” in the Marais quarter, you refer to your travel guide to find directions to Place des Vosges. While studying the guide, a French woman asks if she could look quickly at your book. As the woman examines the map in the book, you realize that another man is standing very close to you. The woman quickly gives back the book and the two walk off together. You inspect your bag and notice that one of the zippers is open, and money is missing.
  • The Pigalle is known as the adult entertainment district of Paris.  The US State Department reports, “Many entertainment establishments in this area engage in aggressive marketing and charge well beyond the normal rate for drinks. Reports of threats of violence to coerce patrons into paying exorbitant beverage tabs are not uncommon. There have also been several violent confrontations between rival gangs in the district, including one in August 2007 one block from the famous Moulin Rouge cabaret. Visitors are encouraged to avoid this area unless touring with a well-organized and reputable tour company.”
  • It is a beautiful, warm summer evening and you decide to walk from Montmartre to the city center via the Pigalle district. When near the Moulin Rouge a man sees you smoking and asks for a cigarette. You give the man a cigarette and another passerby also asks for a cigarette; you give this person a cigarette too. The next morning when you pack your travel pack for the day, you are unable to find your camcorder. Thinking back on the previous evening, you realize that the people who asked for cigarettes were actually working as a team to distract you and steal from you.
  • To stroll the streets along the River Seine is a wonderful way to view the splendid bridges of Paris, some even centuries old. Unfortunately, Parisians and tourists are not the only people taking in the sights of the city; pickpockets also work this well-traveled path. A fellow passerby stops to ask you which direction the famous Pont Neuf, the most famous and oldest bridge in the city. You pull out your map to help guide the friendly traveler in the right direction and beneath the map, the traveler has their hands in your bags.
  • There are many joggers in Paris; it is a beautiful place to get some exercise. A jogger dressed in a Nike outfit accidentally bumps into you and knocks you down. He apologizes and frantically tries to help you up. He also helps himself to the contents of your pocket.  If someone is truly lost and you wish to offer assistance, it may be a better idea to hand over your map, so they can find the location on their own. This allows you to keep an eye on your belongings and pockets, while they find their way.  If someone bumps into you, first check to make sure their hands are not on you.
  • While walking across Le Pont de l’Archevêché (bridge) a passerby accidentally spills their ice cream cone on your back. The person apologetically stops and pulls out tissues to help you clean off your shirt. While they help clean your shirt, they also help themselves to your back pocket.
  • Walking home from a late dinner, you notice a group of 10 or 11-year old kids skating on the sidewalks and clumsily bumping into people. At first, you enjoy watching the children having fun on their rollerblades, but the longer you watch, you see one of the children bump into an old man and swipe the wallet from his back pocket.
  • The Overseas Security Advisory Council reports that petty theft can also occur in Parisian department stores such as Galleries Lafayette, Printemps, and Bon Marché. Thieves swipe wallets, credit cards or even passports that customers set on counters when paying.

Pickpockets and Travel Scams at Paris Restaurants and Hotels

People at h Eiffel Tower at night, watch out for pickpockets and thieves

  • You arrive in Paris exhausted and jet-lagged at 6 a.m. You arrive at your hotel and are unable to check in until 2 p.m., but the hotel agrees to hold your bags until then. You decide to go to a nearby café to try your first, authentic, French croissant and a café au lait. You pay the waiter and then once you leave, you realize that he double charged you. Always check a menu before entering a restaurant or café and always examine the bill at the end of a meal.
  • Although there are fast-food chains such as McDonald’s, Subway, and KFC in Paris, these restaurants usually attract American tourists and pickpockets know this. You want a break from the foreign and decide to enjoy a hamburger at one of the surprisingly clean and stylish chains in the city. You sit down at a table, and a few minutes later, another diner asks to share your table. When the man next to you leaves, he grabs his bag and yours as well.
  • You decide to eat breakfast at your hotel and take your travel pack with you so you can immediately start your sightseeing afterward. Because the breakfast room is on the lower floor of the hotel, you set your pack on the chair across from you. After you finish eating, you collect your things, but to your surprise, your bag is gone. A thief, pretending to be a guest, snuck into the hotel to take the belongings of unsuspecting travelers.
  • After returning from a long day of sightseeing, you return to the room to find that your bags are open and empty, even the socks and undergarments are missing. The only other person who had access to the room was the cleaning staff.  You never know where or when you will be the victim of theft. Keep items in your hotel room locked using a luggage lock or a portable travel safe with a padlock.
  • The US State Department reports, “In hotels, thieves target lobbies and breakfast rooms, and take advantage of moments of inattention to snatch jackets, purses, and backpacks. While many hotel rooms do have safety latches that allow guests to secure their rooms from inside, this feature is not as universal as it is in the United States. If no chain or latch is present, a chair placed up against the door and wedged under the handle is usually an effective obstacle to surreptitious entry during the night. There are, however, reports of thieves breaking into hotel rooms on lower floors through open windows while the occupants are sleeping. To guard against this, hotel room windows should be kept locked at all times. Whenever possible, valuables should be kept in the hotel safe.”

How to Outfox Pickpockets In Paris – Explore the City like a Local

  1. Dress like the locals. Parisians typically dress in darker or neutral colors. Shorts, running shoes, baseball caps, and t-shirts scream “tourist.”
  2. Learn a few French phrases. Parisians are more likely to help you if you make an effort to speak their language.
  3. Familiarize yourself with the local currency in your hotel room, not in a public square. You can even research the different Euro bills online before leaving home.
  4. It is great to be patriotic, but try to avoid wearing the US flag on your backpack or clothing. This again indicates that you are a tourist.
  5. Visit less crowded attractions such as the Musée D’Orsay. The larger Louvre, for example, is always busy with both visitors and petty thieves.
  6. The Police authorities in Paris have created a safety guide for travelers, Paris  – Complete Safety. The guide offers tips on how to avoid becoming a victim and who to contact if theft occurs.

Protect your valuables when traveling from pickpockets. Select one or two different styles of travel security accessories such as an anti-theft waist pack, money belt, passport pouch, or antitheft backpack before you go for peace of mind.

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Keep em’ Out!

Most criminals who burglarize homes are looking for an easy hit; a house that they can break into quickly, take something of value, and leave without being detected. There’s no fail-proof way to prevent home burglaries or to keep out a burglar, however, you can help avoid burglaries of home while on vacation by taking some deterrence measures.

Prevent Home Burglaries When on Vacation

Even if you can’t afford a security system, you can take a few minutes to make your home a little more secure. Some relatively simple steps will greatly decrease the odds of a break-in and help prevent home burglaries while on vacation, which means you can enjoy a bit more peace of mind. And isn’t that what “home” is all about?

A Few Facts About Home Burglaries

Prevent Home Burglaries When on Vacation

Avoiding home burglary while on vacation

  • Once a burglar targets a home to burglarize, most will spend no more than a minute trying to break in and less than five minutes inside.
  • Most residential burglaries occur on the first or ground floor.
  • The entry point is usually made at the rear or by a side door; the second most common access is via the garage door.
  • Most burglaries occur during daytime hours when homes are empty as the occupants are at work.

 Target Your Home As a Burglar

How would you get into your home? Evaluate your home from the inside and out, night and day. You might even try a “mock” break-in, trying window jambs and loose locks on your house’s perimeter. Just let the neighbors know what you’re up to before you go lurking in the bushes.
If you failed your test, here are a few thoughts on how to harden your residence against burglars.

Lights

Even though most burglaries occur during the day, some occur during hours of darkness. Criminals are in search of houses with no one home. To reduce your home’s risk of burglary at night, install a motion sensor light in the front and in the rear of your house wherever possible. To be extra cautious, try to position the lights at the corners of your residence so the motion detectors can catch someone approaching from the side. Make sure the lights are positioned at a height that someone cannot disable them by easily reaching up and unscrewing the bulb. These are solar and require no electrical wiring to install, DIY friendly.

Landscape

Make sure all shrubs and trees are trimmed back so they do not allow a burglar to conceal himself while attempting to open a window or door. If possible, plant bushes with prickly thorns around these locations. They are a cheap deterrent. Also, gravel is a good ground cover under windows because it is noisy underfoot should someone walk on it.

Scope Out Your Yard

Don’t stop your security awareness at the outside walls of your house. Your yard areas also deserve attention. In general, don’t leave anything around the yard that might help a burglar get into your house. Ladders, stackable boxes, or any garden tools should be put away, preferably in a locked cabinet or in the garage. Many burglars have used the property owner’s own tools to break into a home. Don’t place outdoor furniture tables nearby the house. These could become an easy stepladder to the roof. To discourage potential climbers, spread grease on any metal drain pipes if they are close to windows. Use Vaseline or clear automotive grease, depending on the color of the pipe (or replace them with plastic pipe). Yes, criminals do climb up drainpipes. Think about it, most second-story windows are left unsecured and make a house easy to gain entry to.

Hide Your Identity

Do not place your name on your mailbox or front door, especially if you are a woman. If you really have to do this, use your last name only.

Secure the Windows

Though windows are relatively easy to break, the loud noise of shattering glass will deter a thief if you’re near other houses.

Another is to create a lock for wooden-frame windows. At the top edge of the bottom frame, drill two holes perpendicular to the sash or at a slight, downward angle. Drill completely through the inside sash and halfway into the outside sash. Insert nails or bolts (don’t hammer or screw these) into the holes. To test this setup to make sure the bolts won’t pop out when wiggled.

Don’t leave windows and doors open at night whether you’re home or away. That’s a common-sense precaution, but a surprising number of people forget to do just that, especially second-story windows. It’s a good idea to make a “pane patrol” part of your ritual of leaving the house. Use a pick-proof locking device for your windows. Make sure the frames are solid. If you’re beyond the earshot of your neighbors, they won’t hear the glass breaking.

Consider installing a Plexiglas sheet for the more accessible windows. This will make entry through them more difficult. Basement windows are an easy target, since they’re low and usually well hidden. Firmly wedge a steel bar across the window, or install a metal grate over the opening or window.


Prevent home burglary with windows locks

Sliding Window Locks

 

Window alarm  to prevent home break ins

Window Alarms Sound in Case of Broken Glass

 

Secure the Doors

  • All exterior doors should have a solid core to withstand being kicked in. They should also have high-quality deadbolts with at least 1 1/2-inch throws on the bolts themselves. The bolts in the locks should always be solid, not hollow metal.
  • Ensure the door frame has a metal strike plate, which is secured by a minimum of six three-inch screws, which are screwed into the solid door frame.
  • Install a wrap-around steel plate on the front of the door, covering the deadbolt. This will provide extra protection from a burglar kicking in the door and reduce his ability to pry the door lock.
  • If you don’t have a peephole, install one in the front door. If you have one, make sure that you and your family are in the habit of using it. Don’t open the door to anyone you don’t know, especially at night. If the peephole is out of reach of your children, keep a step ladder or stepping box by the door for them to use, or direct them not to open the door.

door jammer security bar to help prevent home break ins and burglaries

Security Bar Stops a Door From Opening, Even with a Key

Signs of the Time

  • The recording of a barking dog, as sometimes suggested, may only be effective for particularly gullible burglars. Some people have a playback system that’s triggered by the doorbell, but the cause-and-effect (push, bark, push, bark) is a little too easy to discern. A Beware of Dog sign is better than nothing; for an added touch of verisimilitude, get a sign that refers to a specific breed rather than the generic Dog. A “Beware of Rottweiler” sign (or a bumper sticker that says “I Love My Pit Bull”) might do the trick. Also, think about putting up a home alarm sign in the yard even if you don’t have an alarm. It may deter a burglar from choosing your home.Beware of the Dog Sign to help prevent home burglaries
  • Dogs, even the small yip-yip variety, have sharp teeth and a way of noisily announcing stealthy intruders. But a dog is more
  •  than an organic alarm–it’s a living creature, and it’ll need a lifetime of love, care, attention, and exercise. If you can genuinely welcome a dog into your life, it will welcome the task of protecting you. But if you’re a cat person heart, then look into electronic security systems.
  • Get a doorbell with a built-in camera to record activity at your door and in front of your home.
  • Motion activated cameras mounted on your eaves are good too. Many burglars look for these and pass on homes that have them in place.

Ring Spotlight Cam Wired: Plugged-in HD security camera with built-in spotlights, two-way talk and a siren alarm, to help prevent home burglaries

Motion Detection Security Camera with built-in spotlight Protect Your Valuables.

Don’t leave your valuables (tablet, computer, jewelry, etc.) where they can be seen from a window. If you don’t want to hide everything from sight, consider draperies and blinds. Use a safe. One of our favorites is a Wall Safe that you can install anywhere between the studs.

Make a valuables inventory. Keep a record of your expensive and personally significant items, not just a listing, but a photographic or videotape record if possible.  Use your phone to take a video and email the video to yourself in addition to keeping it on your phone.  This is helpful for both the police and the insurance agency (if you have a homeowner’s policy) in identifying stolen goods.

Use an engraving pen to mark these items with some kind of personal identifying information, such as your initials, in an inconspicuous place. This also helps record your possessions in case of any other mishap, such as fire or flood. Note:  Some experts recommend that property owners use their driver’s license number, followed by the state of issuance.

Bonus Information – The types of burglars defined

Opportunity Burglars

This type of thief searches for easy, quick, and petty opportunities. If you leave your door unlocked or a window open, they will take advantage of your trust or forgetfulness. In law, this would be considered a second-degree crime or not premeditated. An opportunity burglar will not do very much to decide who they will burglarize; they look for an easy target. They don’t tend to steal very much of value because they don’t know what they’ll find until they are in the act.

Smash Burglars

A smash-and-grab burglar is more desperate than an opportunity burglar. They are often into drugs and are only looking for cash or items that can quickly be exchanged for cash. A smasher usually enters a home or business by breaking through a door or window. This goes for vehicle break-ins, too.

Prowler Burglars

A prowler is more of a professional than a smasher or opportunity thief. They will have connections through which they can channel stolen goods, and they will put more scrutiny and planning into a burglary. A prowler often begins as an opportunity thief and then elevates his craft to be more deliberate and organized to gain more from their efforts. Their technique includes targeting and studying their victim’s habits and schedules to reduce the chance of being caught.

Targeted Burglars

A targeted burglar has nearly mastered their craft and knows specifically what they are after. After a few years of prowling, a burglar will often decide to target specific high-value items. They know what they want, they do rigorous research and they even know how long it will take the Police to respond to an alarm. Targeted burglars are often part of a Ring. These rings are nationwide, so items stolen in one state are shipped to others to be sold. Targeted Thieves will sometimes have an Insider, sometimes someone connected with an insurance company. This means they know the value of their targeted item and most of the details about the security around that item. A targeted burglar will likely change states frequently, so they can strike in New Jersey and then move to California to find another target.

Complete Burglars

Similar to a Prowler in methods, but professional like a Targeted Burglar, the Complete Burglar will clean a house out entirely. When a house is completely bare after a robbery, a Complete Burglar was involved. Like Targeted Burglars, a Complete Burglar will have Insiders and a Ring. An Insider will tell them that you are going on vacation, and a moving truck will arrive to take every item in your house. Like a Targeted Burglar, a complete burglar will likely move around often.

Prevent home burglaries by following a few common-sense tasks around your home’s garden. Then follow up with installing motion detection lights or better yet a motion-activated surveillance camera, like Ring, to discourage those casing and targeting properties.

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hiding valuables at home

While most hotel employees are honest, every occupation has a few employees who may steal.  The following videos were taken by hotel guests who have caught dishonest hotel housekeepers or maids stealing items from their room, or going into their personal belongings in search of items to steal.

You should always check that your valuables are secured out of view prior to leaving your hotel room. Your hotel room is not private, nor is it  100% secure. Hotel staff has access to it and perhaps so do prior guests or thieves.  Obviously, many hotel rooms have in-room safes, but sometimes they don’t work or you may be concerned that dishonest hotel employees have the master code to the room safes. Hotel staff must have a passkey or passcode to access safes for guests who forget their code or if the safe electronics fail.

How to Thwart Stealing from Your Hotel Room

The most obvious way not to tempt anyone who enters your hotel room not to steal is not to leave any valuables visible. The next level is to use a variety of travel security products to help prevent hotel room theft.

One solution is to use a portable travel safe. They are easy to carry and help protect valuables left in a hotel room, car, dorm, or even at home!  Here is one of our favorite portable safes. It’s packable, holds a laptop plus a whole lot more. If you need security outside of your room take it with you and use the built-in steel cable to lock it down to a stationary item. Securing fewer items? The Pacsafe 5L travel safe may be all you need, it accommodates a tablet and takes up minimal space in your luggage.  If you want a visual deterrent and tamper-evident lock for your hotel room safe, the Milockie is a wise choice.

While most employees who work in hotels are honest,  we think it is best not to tempt people. The first video was shot by a traveler who was staying in a hotel overseas and thought that money was being taken out of his wallet when he was away from his room.  He set up a hidden camera and caught the hotel maid stealing money from his wallet.

Videos Caught Housekeepers or Maids Stealing from Guest Rooms

 

 

 

We would like to emphasize again that the vast majority of housekeepers are honest! Secondly, we understand that theft by housekeepers from hotel rooms is more prevalent in international destinations. If your money, passport, or other valuables are stolen while you are in a foreign country it can be devastating, possibly affecting your ability to travel and delaying your ability to fly home. Therefore we suggest you take added measures to increase the security of your valuables while traveling.  For your hotel room or vacation rental property, one reliable measure is to bring a hotel safe tamper-evident device or a steel-reinforced travel safe.

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Pickpocket Scams in Milan, Italy

Milan may be the fashion capital of Italy, but it is also a city where tourists can be victims of pickpocketing firsthand.  Pickpocket scams in Italy mirror the tide of tourists visiting. In Milan, the top places where you need to exercise caution are where there are high concentrations of tourists, such as the central train station Stazione Cadorna, and these locations popular with tourists: Piazza del Duomo, Castello Sforzesco, and Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II. The more people there are in a location the more easily marks can be distracted and victimized by thieves disappearing into the crowds.

  • In the main train station, Stazione Cadorna, there are often people waiting for tourists to arrive. Some are eager to strike up a conversation with a mark or to offer assistance. A newly arrived traveler may not be quick thinking and appropriately suspicious of “friendly strangers,” thus making for a perfect target. A pickpocket scam here, for example, is carried out at the payphones. In Italy, payphones are difficult to use for first-timers, and a friendly man may approach to offer assistance. Once the helpless tourist accepts, the man offers to take the traveler to a nearby bar, or if assisting a woman, expect a kiss in return. Never go to a second location with a stranger.
  • Pickpocket scams in Italy include people on the street who will always offer what seem to be free gifts of flowers, prayer cards, or even a friendship wristband. Do not accept them and try to avoid these people at all costs, these gifts are never free. The person will want money for the item or even try to keep you in conversation so an accomplice can steal from you while you are attentive to the discussion.
  • Here’s another one, at a popular tourist site, a young girl may approach you and stand very close. In one hand she is carrying a cardboard sign and attempting to tell you something in Italian, in the other hand she has your wallet from your pocket…hidden behind her cardboard sign. Pickpockets scams in Italy are not necessarily unique to Italy, they are perpetrated in European cities too.
  • Motor coaches are always popular hunting grounds for tourists especially routes that connect the airport and main train station. Once you depart the coach with your laptop bag or camera in one hand and your recently collected luggage in the other, a thief asks you a question in Italian. While you are trying to decipher what the person needs, an accomplice moves past you, possibly even bumping into you, and lifts one of your bags you momentarily placed on the ground.

Theft Video at the Milan, Italy Airport

This is a video of a theft from a traveler at the Milan, Italy airport.  Always keep an eye on your luggage, no matter how close it is to you.

Foil Pickpocket scams by keeping your valuables close and secure. Rely on a security purse or security day pack when traveling.
Security waist packs are designed with locking zippers to keep thieves out and offer other features to keep your possessions secure.

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Watch how these purse thieves are caught on video stealing purses in various situations and various countries. Sometimes, you really need to watch videos of items being stolen from travelers to truly understand the importance of making sure your bags are theft-resistant to keep your valuables secure. Travel with peace of mind by investing in an anti-theft travel bag, a money belt, or an anti-theft waist pack before you begin packing your bags.

Purse Thieves Caught on Video

In this video, you will see a woman walk into a restaurant and sit at a table by herself next to a table of several travelers. Watch how the thief reaches under the traveler’s chair two times to steal an unattended travel bag, succeeds, and flees the restaurant. If the traveler had used a security travel bag like this one, the bag strap would have been secured to the chair, preventing the theft.

Child Pickpocket in Hanoi, Viet Nam

 Distraction Theft of Cell Phone

Watch this video in a cyber cafe as the thief does a distraction theft by dropping money on the floor and telling the victim that it is his.  When the victim bends down to pick it up, the thief steals his cell phone.  This same type of theft can be used to steal a purse, camera bag, or travel bag.  Using a security day bag such as this one can help prevent this type of theft.

 Theft of Purse from Car at Gas Station

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 Theft of Wallet From Woman’s Purse  – London, UK

Woman steals bag

Purse Thieves Caught on Video

An effective way to thwart purse and bag thieves is to use or wear anti-theft travel gear.

Security Features You Want in an Anti-theft Travel Bag

The most important security feature of an anti-theft bag is a locking zipper. A locking zipper is one that stays closed by having the zipper pull stay secured to the bag with a carabiner-style hook. It takes two hands to open it keeping the hand of thieves out of your bag and your valuables and possessions secure.

Another valuable security feature is an anti-theft strap that you can detach from the bag on one end, wrap the strap through an armrest on a chair, and then reattach to the bag. This connects the bag to the chair (or another stationary item) to prevent grab-n-go thefts.

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You Won’t Find Me!

Where do you hide valuables at home? Have you ever given it thought about where is the best, and worst, places to hide small valuables at home? Not everything fits in a safe, and what if you don’t have one.  All things considered, a safety deposit box in a bank vault is still the best place to keep jewelry and other valuables, but there are some places around your home that make terrific hiding places for important smaller items and cash.

Worst Locations at Home to Hide Small Valuables

There are some places where experienced thieves are sure to look, such as inside top drawers, underneath any drawer, and behind wall art in the den or bedroom. We suggest you take care to avoid these obvious, or rather popular, caches.

It’s a good idea to wrap items in plastic before stashing them. Most of our suggestions are for small objects that can be held in your hand or cash. Take time to look around your place for spaces where you can hide things unobtrusively. You want places that are easily overlooked and will not be disturbed accidentally by a house guest, cleaning person or anyone else who may enter your home like a pet sitter.

The following suggestions are less obvious places than the ones mentioned above, but remember that a determined thief with enough time will probably find what you have in your home. What you’re doing here is buying time, hoping that any burglar will be disturbed before getting to your good stuff.

Hide it Easily – Quick Hacks to Hide Valuables at Home

Look for easily accessible places, which are also easily overlooked by the casual observer. Some good examples of these places are:

  • Bulk dry goods such as jars of rice and flour can hide small valuables and be kept out of the way on the back shelf.
  • Aspirin or brown pill bottles inside the medicine cabinet can be a good bet.
  • Packages of frozen vegetables can be thawed, and refrozen with items inside them.
  • Tennis balls with a small slit in them will return to their original shape. Squeeze the ball to open and stuff, then place back in the container.
  • Vacuum cleaner bags (clean ones) can hide an envelope of cash inside them.
  • Stuffed animals can be cut open (gently, and not around young children) and used as unlikely containers. Cut along a seam, stuff and re-sew Teddy before returning him to his friends.
  • Ceiling light fixtures can be unscrewed, and small valuables may be placed within the electrical box underneath.
  • Composite “rocks” that are hollow are common for hiding keys and can be placed outside in the garden or a planter with other rocks.
Fake rock designed hide small valuables

Fake rock designed to hide small valuables

  • A portable safe that you tether down with a steel cable and lock closed is ideal for slightly larger items. It’s virtually cut-proof, and you can tether it to a bed frame, plumbing under the sink, or a similar difficult item to breach. Typically, burglars want to be in and quickly. Even if they find this safe, they won’t be able to remove it or open it without specific tools and time. It’s a great security bag you can use at home, at the office, or while traveling.

Last-Minute Places to Hide Small Items and Money

Linen closets – inside folded towels
Place an envelope with cash between your bakeware
Inside your shower curtain rod
Inside a flashlight
Inside your Christmas decorations box
Inside plastic Easter eggs
Inside a DVD case
Inside a decorative pillow
Inside a pocket of a hiking backpack at the back of the closet
Inside your high school yearbook
Inside a board game
Inside a travel mug

Consider a low-cost diversion safe. Get a couple and one for a friend; they’re clever and make great gifts too.

 

Create a More Permanent Hiding Spot

These places require a bit more preparation to become effectively hidden containers.

Book safe: glue most of the pages of an old, uninteresting hardcover book together. Use a coping saw to cut a hollow area out of the middle. Drill starter holes for the saw. Then glue the box made with the pages to the back cover and let dry thoroughly. Stash on your bookshelf among other books or buy a “book safe” and place it among other books.
Steps and flooring have natural hollow spaces underneath. Carpentry skills are required to effectively create a seamless surface that escapes detection.
Hollow-core doors can have sections cut out of the hinge edge to give access to space within the door. Use the cutout piece as a plug.
The tops of poster beds unscrew. Hollow spaces can be drilled out in the posts themselves.  Commercial wall and floor safes should be installed by a professional, and are effective at drastically slowing down the unprepared casual thief from accessing your valuables.

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Theft At Airport Screening Stations

Theft at security checkpoints continues to be reported at airports around the world. Theft at airport screening stations is most prevalent in foreign countries or domestic airports without stringent TSA screening protocols. And the bigger the crowd and the greater the activity around the security checkpoints the better too. Therefore your valuables and property are at most risk in these locations and during these times. While this is not a very common type of theft, it can be devastating because it typically includes the theft of passports, wallets or other valuables you keep in your carry-on and are essential for travel. Imagine losing your phone or wallet at the beginning of a trip!

 

Two Types of Thefts Happen at Airport Security Checkpoints

Airport screening stations and security checkpoints lend themselves typically to two different types of thefts.  One is set up or planned and the other is a theft of opportunity.

The planned or setup theft method involves two scammers working together as a team. The team targets you and right before you enter the screening line, both of the scammers walk in front of you in the security line. The first thief scammer goes through the security checkpoint screening without issue, however, the second one, known as the stall, holds up the line by spending time removing items from his pockets.  Sometimes he even drops change on the ground to slow things down by fumbling the picking up of the coins.

He causes this stall or distraction only after you and he both have placed your carry-on bags onto the x-ray conveyor belt but before walking through the metal detector. This allows him or her to get to the bags as they come out of the Xray tunnel and before you have a chance to retrieve your bag. If your is small it can be picked up and placed inside another bag.

A second common method of theft is as you are delayed getting through the body scanner someone in front of you picks up a small item belonging to you like a wallet or phone which you have placed is a small open tray designed to hold keys, phones, and similar items, and places it in his larger bag and walks away with it hidden from your view. Sophisticated thieves may even hand off the stolen item to an accomplice.

How Do You Prevent Theft at Security Checkpoints?

  1. Don’t walk through the metal detector before your bags
    When flying with a companion make sure one of you has cleared the detector before your valuables get placed onto the conveyor belt, that way the person on the other side of the x-ray machine can keep an eye on and pick up the bags immediately as they pass through. When you don’t have a travel companion and there are unavoidable lines, delay putting your luggage and laptop on the conveyor belt until you’re sure you’ll be the next person through the metal detector. And, as you move through the detector, keep your eyes on the conveyor belt and watch for your luggage and laptop to come through at the other end, while keeping a ‘sharp eye’ on what those in front of you are picking up.
  2.  Place pocket contents inside your bag
    Avoid putting loose items of value typically carried in your pocket in a tray and letting it pass through. Place all valuables in a zippered pocket of your carry-on luggage. If you travel with a carry-on bag that does not have any external pockets, then plan ahead and place them on your bag prior to getting in the security line. If you travel with a laptop bag then place your small valuables in it.
  3. Wear slip-on shoes
     Wear shoes that you can easily slip off and quickly put back on so as not to be distracted away from your valuables as the security station.
  4.  Get through the checkpoint as a trusted traveler
    Join a trusted traveler program like TSA Pre Check or Global Entry to facilitate moving through screening with the least amount of hassle.
  5.  Plan for delays at security
    Arrive at the airport earlier than you have in the past to avoid being rushed and possibly flustered by security checkpoints

Anti-theft or security carry-on luggage

The most secure luggage design for carry-on luggage or a checked bag has two key features. First, it should be made of a solid material like PVC, polycarbonate, or similar materials. This solid material is puncture-proof. The next must-have feature is that the bag clasps shut. Zippers can break and can be breached by a crook using a pen to poke through the teeth of the zipper. A quick guiding of the zipper pulls over the puncture hole and then reseals the breached zipper. Bags with clasp closures typically have locking clamp-style locks.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Is it safe to stay in a hotel alone as a woman? If you have ever had a concern about someone unexpected entering your hotel room while you’re inside? The problem while not prevalent is real.

Alarms for Hotel Room Doors Can Keep Intruders Out

Even with security protocols in place, well-meaning hotel personnel like housekeeping and maintenance staff might open room doors for guests encountered in the hallway. They may even use a tool to bypass the metal swing bar dead-bolt to help the “guest” get inside. The swing bar can only be flipped from the wall and over the door if someone is inside so if it is engaged someone is inside the room!

While this post focuses on how to add an alarm to your door, there are more important hotel safety tips for women traveling alone at the end of the article so keep on reading to the end.

Two Popular Security Alarms for Hotel Room Doors

The Personal Door Alarm and the Door Stop with Alarm are two solutions worth learning about. The Portable Door Alarm alerts you if the door is opened even just a little bit by sounding an alarm. It will allow the door to be opened. It is small light weight and easy to pack. The Door Stop and Alarm stops the door from swinging open plus it has an alarm that goes off when the door swings onto the steel plate and pushes down on the plate. Slightly larger it too is easy to pack.

Both alarm devices can help you feel safer if you need to stay in a hotel alone. Here’s more on both alarms for hotel room doors.


is it safe to stay in a hotel alone as a woman, portable door alarm for hotel doorsPortable Travel Door Alarm with LED Flashlight

  • Flashlight & door alarm in one unit
  • Easy to set up on any door – no installation required
  • High Pitched 95-decibel alarm triggered when unauthorized entry is attempted.
  • Great for hotel and motel rooms, train compartments, as well as dorm rooms.
  • Built-in emergency LED flashlight
  • Uses 2 common CR2032 button-cell batteries, included

The Portable Door Alarm is easy to use and can be used on doors and many styles of hotel room windows. Simply hang the door alarm on the inside handle of your hotel camper, or boat door knob or lever. When someone attempts to open the door from the outside, the device activates a piercing 95-decibel alarm which is designed to scare off the potential intruder. A Door Alarm also features a built-in flashlight for use in a darkened room for additional safety and convenience.

How the Portable Door Alarm Works

The Portable Door Alarm is extremely easy to use and takes only 5 seconds to setup which is described as follows:

Pull the bottom clip which removes the two slim silver prongs which are attached by a wire to the Portable Door Alarm. The prongs are held together with a clear plastic cover. Slide off the cover (save the cover as you’ll want to replace it when the alarm is not in use) and the prongs will separate causing a loud alarm to sound alerting you that the door alarm is functioning properly. Use your fingers to press the prongs together which stops the alarm.

Portable door alarm for hotel rood doors

Locate a space in the door or window jamb and slide the closed prongs between the door and frame (or window and frame). As long as the door remains closed the Travel Door Alarm will remain silent. If the door or window is opened (even a little bit) the Portable Door Alarm will loosen from its placement causing the prongs to separate and the alarm to sound. Not only is the high-pitched alarm a great warning to you, but is likely to startle and scare off an unsuspecting Intruder.

When the Portable Travel Alarm is not in use, the sensor slides back into the alarm. Nothing to turn on or off…the battery is used only when the alarm sounds.
 Door stop wedge with alarm for hotel doors

 

The Door Stop and Alarm

The door stop with alarm can be used in two ways. Use it as a regular device to keep a door from swinging open into a room.  Use it as a safety device by turning it on and an alarm will sound if a door swings onto it and presses the silver plate down onto the unit. Turn the switch off and the unit is a regular door stop.  If an intruder attempts to open the door, the wedge-shaped design will prevent it from opening and activate a 120 dB alarm to frighten him away. The door stop requires a 9-volt battery to make the alarm work. This is a great item for home or apartment use; especially if you have a side door to the house or another entry door which is not well secured.

portable door stop and alarm for hotels

Both Alarm Devices are useful beyond home and hotels, other applications, include:

  • Hotel Windows
  • Dorm Rooms
  • Apartments
  • Boats and Campers
  • Vacation Rentals

More Hotel Safety Tips for Women Travelers

  1. Stay in a hotel with room access only from the interior of the hotel. Exterior room doors found in motels are riskier.
  2. Reserve the room under your first initial and last name, that way the reservation is nongender specific.
  3.  Don’t stay on the ground floor, they are easier to access for non-guest intruders. Ask for a room higher up but not higher than 6 or 7 stories in case of fire or natural disaster. Typically fire ladders reach about 7 stories up.
  4. Have the front desk employee write down your room number and not announce it for privacy.
  5. Upon entering the room inspect the room for hidden intruders behind the curtains, under the bed and closet and bathroom. Make sure the windows and adjoining room door have functioning locks. Use the deadbolt AND a portable door alarm in case even the deadbolt is compromised.
  6. Use the main lobby door to enter and leave the property. Do not use the stairwell where you could be isolated.
  7. When leaving your room make it seem occupied by leaving the TV on and leaving the do not disturb sign on the door handle.
  8. Use the valet service to park your car, while more costly it is safer than walking in a parking garage by yourself.

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