AccessMyLibrary provides FREE access to over 30 million articles from top publications available through your library.
Create a link to this page
Copy and paste this link tag into your Web page or blog:
Richard Noren told the Anchorage Daily News (Alaska) about a break-in that happened at his house, "It had to be a smash and dash thing." He went on to say that he reasoned from the kicked-in doors and the limited amount of missing valuables that robbers had hit his house quickly while he was on vacation and then just as quickly exited. The thieves had taken a computer and two pistols. Furthermore, he told reporters, he figured that the thieves would come back for more. And he was correct.
Noren and his wife learned about the break-in on December 29 while they were on vacation, when they received a call from their daughter telling them that their house had been robbed. They hurried home and contacted police. Then Noren decided to lie in wait that night to see if the burglars would hit again to get some of the stuff that they'd left behind. He parked his car a distance away and waited in a darkened house for the burglars to return.
A short while past 4 a.m., he heard a car drive up and down the street "half a dozen times." Then it was game time. Noren told the Daily News that the car stopped and a man got out. The man came up to Noren's front door, knocked, and ...
Source: HighBeam Research, Trying again.(Richard Noren)