smelendez wrote:
From a policemans perspective.. In southern california.. Its not that we don't care.. There is only so much we can do. We show up.. Find out whats missing.. How did they get in.. Any evidence left.. And thats bout it. Then we have to haul off the the guy getting stabbed in progress or the lady getting punched by her husband. Burglary is the most unsolved crime.. And believe it or not.. We do not have crystal balls that tell us "who done it." That being said.. Sorry bout your break in man.. I would want them to take anything but the lings.
I'll second this from a detective's perspective.
This is what I do for a living, I'm a burglary detective. The problem with burglary is that they are very hard cases to solve. The national clearance rate in the US is around 15%. About 99% of the time we have no witnesses as opposed to crimes against persons. Also we have little in the way of forensic evidence. What people don't understand is that a fingerprint collected at the scene usually doesn't have enough "points" to use for comparison. Also DNA takes forever and a day to get back from lab and the person has to be in the data base. Another "known" sample is then taken to compare after the initial hit. Further every detective usually caries 30 burglaries a month, we have eight detectives is the squad, along with other special assignments.
Now don't get to discouraged. What usually happens with us is that the dbags get picked up doing something else stupid and we can connect them to other burglaries in the same area. Having good records and serial numbers helps us tremendously if we recover property.
Sorry about the break in , it does rattle the nerves when some unknown person is rummaging through your home. Hopefully they can find who broke into your house.