The offenders admitted they went in because the door was unlocked. That's all from me on this.
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I’m willing to split the baby on this one: the guy was a total douche for carelessly leaving his family to the winds of fate just to avoid carrying a key. What a complete lack of manhood. He failed at life.
At the same time, he’s got to live with it. I don’t see any point in piling on legal charges. He’s not the VCAs doing the crime.
JMO.
I read a book a long time ago about serial killers, and one case stood out. The guy was totally disorganized, and his only criteria in victim selection was whether or not the door was unlocked.
It's pretty fucking simple in the 21st century. Electronic deadbolts are inexpensive and easy to install. I haven't carried a house key in years, and our doors are locked all the time.
Yep, 3 houses ago we got these.
https://www.schlage.com/en/home/prod...365PLYFFF.html
The two times we have moved since these went onto the house in the first week. To lock it on the way out you hit the little button above the keypad and turn the knob 70-80deg to the left. To lock on the way in you turn the lever 70deg. It is now just a natural thing we do every time we go through the door. Yesterday we were unloading a bunch of stuff from the car and carrying it into the house. One item needed to go in the garage that we were walking through. I decided to spend the 3 minutes needed to put it in it's proper place vs setting it on my workbench. Done putting it away I hit the garage door button, went to open the door to the house and it was locked. Did the combination, muttered a bit on the way in. Wife says sorry, it's just automatic, I didn't mean to lock you out.
We have a Yale electronic lock on the front door and everybody has their own code. I can check lock status remotely and even lock or unlock it when I’m not home. We have two other keyed entries if the electronic lock goes TU, but it’s been reliable.
Yup. You can lock it up without having to tote around that huge, heavy key.
https://www.lowes.com/pd/Kwikset-Sig...pad/5014056323
Ours is a Kwikset similar to this. Of course, the security screen door covering it is formed in such a way that I have a regular dumb deadbolt on it, so I still use a key.
The electronic deadbolt is how I got my parents to actually use the deadbolt at their house instead of just the dinky knob lock.
I wonder how often electronic locks fail, requiring folks to break into their own homes.
(Sort of like the electronic safe misadventures which have been reported.)
I don't know the answer, which is why I posted this.