LeafTalk


Armed Robbery - 22 January 2008

(LaVista Road Corridor: Clairmont Road to Atlanta City Limits)

Recently Armed Robberies were reported along LaVista Road where pedestrians (on foot) appear to be the primary victims. Reported incidents occurred between the hours of 9:00 pm to 3:00 am.

At this time, the only description provided is:

  • 2 or 3 black males,
  • young - late teens to early 20's
  • all in dark clothing
  • armed with a black handgun
  • possibly occupying either a dark color or a gold sedan type vehicle.

If you have any information pertaining to this incident, please contact the DeKalb County Police Robbery Unit at 770.724.7890 as soon as possible.

Ways to possibly avoid becoming a victim:

  • Avoid walking alone, especially in the early morning and late evening hours; in dimly lit areas
  • Always be aware of your surroundings; pay attention to person who appear to be following you on foot or in a vehicle
  • Avoid carrying large amounts of cash on your person
  • Communicate with your neighbors on suspicious activity seen in shopping centers and other frequented places

If you are a victim:

  • Do not attempt to struggle or fight with the perpetrator; do not resist
  • Give them what they want as quick as possible
  • Try to memorize the description of the perpetrator and vehicle
  • Call 911 immediately from a safe location as soon as possible

--Janean Hightower, Public Education Specialist, DeKalb County Police, Center Precinct


We have two levels of security in LaVista Park. The first level is the free and voluntary Neighborhood Watch program, certified by DeKalb County. The second level is a Security Patrol subscription available to all residents. The annual subscription is $185.00 and includes one individual membership in the LaVista Park Civic Association. Additional individual memberships are available at $20.00 each.

Currently, our Neighborhood Watch Program is up for recertification with the DeKalb County Neighborhood Watch Program. The new certification guidelines require that we have at least 60 block captains. That number is based on the 650 households in our neighborhood. At this writing, we have 58 active Block Captains. Please read on and strongly consider becoming a Block Captain. Contact our Watch Coordinator to volunteer (watch@lavistapark.org) .

Additionally, as we go through the recertification process, we will need to receive at least 505 signatures from our residents agreeing to accept the responsibilities that are part of the Neighborhood Watch Program. Please agree and sign the forms that are to be brought around by your Block Captain.

Unless we can reach these minimums, the county will remove the Neighborhood Watch signs from our neighborhood.

The Neighborhood Watch Program is one of the most effective and least costly ways to prevent crime and reduce fear. Neighborhood Watch fights the isolation that crime both creates and feeds upon. It forges bonds among area residents, helps reduce burglaries and robberies and improves relations between police and the community. Residents should be aware that their responsibilities include:

  • Know your neighbors
  • Exchange home, work and emergency phone numbers, types of vehicles and other information with your neighbors and Block Captain.
  • Let a neighbor and your Block Captain know when you are going to be away from home as well as notifying the LaVista Park Patrol, if you are a subscriber.
  • Make sure your home is secured.
  • Keep a watch for suspicious persons and vehicles.
  • Call 911 to report any suspicious activity or crime incidents that occur at your home or that you witness in the neighborhood.
  • Call or email your Block Captain or Section Vice-President with details about the suspicious activity or crime after you have called the police. Do not call or email the Patrol or Webmaster.
Click HERE for a listing of Block Captains. Volunteer Block Captains are the foundation of Neighborhood Watch and are always welcome. The Neighborhood Watch Resources page will provide information about the responsibilities of a Block Captain. If you are interested in being a volunteer, please email our Neighborhood Watch Coordinator at watch(at)lavistapark.org.

On most streets there is a Resident Identification Map that locates and lists the residents on that street and their home/emergency numbers. If you would like to receive a map or add your information to the map for your street, please contact your Block Captain or Section Vice-President. Click HERE to find your Block Captain.

LaVista Park employs off-duty DeKalb County police officers for a neighborhood patrol. These officers patrol our neighborhood in their personal cars, not county police cars. A magnetic LaVista Park Patrol sign may be seen on the front doors.

Enrollment in the Patrol is on a subscription basis at $185 per year (June 1 - May 31) and includes one individual membership in the Association. Patrol participants receive a sign for their yard and special check of their property when away or on vacation.

When you are going to be out of town, leave a House Check Request for the Patrol in their mailbox. Tell them the dates you will be gone and leave a local emergency telephone number. Also, let them know if anyone will be entering your house, or if you are expecting workers or pet sitters, etc. The Patrol officers will do an extra check of the doors and windows of your house while you are away. Additionally, if you are having contractors in and out of your house, the Patrol officers will monitor your house for persons other than your authorized contractor. If you need to know the location of the patrol mailbox, or would like more information about subscribing to the patrol services, call Henry Batten at 404.678.5699, or e-mail to watch(at)lavistapark.org. To reach Henry, copy and paste the address into the TO: field of your e-mail program. Then replace the (at) with the @ symbol.

If you would like to subscribe to the LaVista Park Patrol, please click HERE to go to the form to apply for the service.


Power Point Presentation on ATM safety tips

Click HERE to view presentation. Navigate between slides using the right arrow key or the Page Down key.


NC Burglar Shares Tips on How He Preyed on Homes

Charlotte's most prolific burglar details what he looked for in residential security weaknesses

Apr. 23--If you lived in a middle- or upper-class neighborhood in Charlotte in the 1990s, you may have seen Anthony Ferguson walking down your street. Chances are he carried a rake and had gardening gloves in his back pocket.

But Ferguson was no landscaper.

He was a burglar, the most prolific in city history.

Ferguson confessed to breaking into more than 600 Charlotte homes from the mid-1980s until he was caught in 1999, police said. He's now serving a 12-year sentence at a federal prison in Kentucky.

But before he was locked up, police did something to ensure that his record won't be broken.

As part of a plea bargain, they spent days driving him around and interviewing him about his methods. They have turned the highlights into a video that will air on the Government Channel this week.

Ferguson, 43, did not return calls last week. If his good behavior continues, a spokeswoman said, he's scheduled to get out of prison in 2010.

His observations to police on more than five hours of tape are frank, frightening and sometimes counterintuitive. But they offer a glimpse into the mind of a prolific burglar whose stories give new advice on the best ways to protect your home.

Pick the right neighborhood

Ferguson was 10 when he broke into his first Charlotte home. Early on, he took TVs, VCRs and other electronics. But he soon realized that jewelry was the best target, since it fit in his pockets and could be melted down. Over the next 25 years, what started as a hobby turned into a profession that he says netted him between $3 million and $5 million.

"The more I broke into houses, the more I had to do it," he says on the video. "It's like potato chips. You can't eat just one. That's how I survived. That's how I ate. That's how I got money to have a place to sleep."

He said he always started with a high-income neighborhood such as Foxcroft or Park Crossing, and he hit during the day.

Mornings between 8 and 11 were best, but early afternoon could work too. He avoided lunchtime and evenings because people were likely to be home, and he especially liked rainy days.

"When it rains, people tend to be in a hurry and they really get careless," he said. "They forget to lock their door or lock their windows."

Because jewelry was his specialty and it's easy to carry, Ferguson always entered the neighborhood by foot -- never by car.

Often, he wore disguises.

"If you see me and two other black guys, you're going to automatically call police because we look suspicious," Ferguson said. "But if I got a rake thrown over my shoulder and plastic bags hanging out of my back pocket and a pair of gloves hanging out of my back pocket, you think I'm somebody's yard man."

Ferguson picked a target, then always knocked to make sure the house was empty.

If someone answered, he would ask for Mr. Smith or Mrs. Won or some other made-up name. Or he'd offer to do some yard work. Several times, residents took him up on the offer, he said, and he got stuck raking or cleaning gutters all day.

When that happened, he said, "I usually went back and broke in later."

Entry is often easy

If no one answered the door, Ferguson hid behind bushes, shrubs, a fence or whatever cover was available.

Then he would wait at least 15 minutes, to make sure neighbors hadn't called police.

He liked to break in through windows, but always tried doors first.

"You'd be surprised how many doors I turn the handle and the door comes open and I walk right in," he said. "And nine times out of 10, people leave their windows unlocked."

A locked house? Not a problem -- though he never carried burglary tools.

"You don't have to, because the homeowner is going to leave something for you to do it with," he said. "People leave their garage doors open, they leave tool boxes sitting on back porches, they leave stuff just laying around for you to use on their houses."

Alarms are no deterrent

For Ferguson at least, alarm systems weren't a deterrent. In fact, he specifically looked for homes that had them. For one thing, he said, they were turned off more than half the time. He usually could check out the system because of what he describes as a chronic security company mistake: "They put the alarm box where I can look in the window and see it."

Another mistake, according to Ferguson: Most two-story homes have no alarms on the second floor -- where many master bedrooms and most jewelry boxes can be found.

"If you don't have an alarm on a second-floor window," Ferguson said, "and there's a tree or ladder or anything, I'll crawl up and go through the second-floor window and never, ever set the alarm off because I don't even have to go downstairs."

When all else failed, he could avoid the system by taking apart a window rather than opening it. Once inside, he was careful to avoid motion detectors.

"If I do go in your house and you got an alarm system, I never step in a hallway and I never step in a doorway and I check for sensors," he said. "To get from room to room, I kick holes in the Sheetrock."

If the alarm went off, however, Ferguson always fled. Often, he said, the police would pass him walking down the street, his pockets stuffed with jewelry, as they sped to the home.

"They would just ride right by. I would jump on the city bus and go back across town."

One Burglar's Wish List

Here's what burglar Anthony Ferguson looked for:

A well-maintained home and yard. "If someone keeps their yard lookin' really nice, that lets me know that person right there has the quality house I'm looking for." Ferguson said he also looked at such things as fresh paint and nice porch furniture.

Cover. It could be bushes, shrubs, trees or a tall wooden fence close to the house where he could hide. "The houses that are more in the open, that don't have cover, are the ones that don't get hit."

Toys and flowers. Because he was a jewelry thief, Ferguson looked for signs that a woman lived in the house.

Open or broken windows. "And it doesn't have to be a bottom-story window. It could be a second-floor window, and people leave a lot of second-floor windows open."

An alarm system. "I basically don't hit houses that ain't got alarms. The houses that got the alarms, you know, 'Hey, there's something there.' " (Police say most other burglars are deterred by alarm systems.)

Burglar Turnoffs

Here's what made Ferguson think twice: Nosy neighbors. "If I see a neighbor looking out the window, nine times out of 10, I'm going to leave."

Television or radio noise. "A lot of houses have been lucky I didn't go into them because I hear the TV or I hear music and it makes me think someone is there."

Covered windows. "If the blinds are closed, it gives the impression that someone is there. That puts a little fear in you."

Dogs. Ferguson has burglarized homes with dogs, but said they make it more difficult. "When a dog barks, people start looking out their windows to see why the dog is barking."

Copyright (c) 2006, The Charlotte Observer, N.C.