The Security Illusion
Today's burglar alarms do a great job of detecting an intruder. But in the area
of response, performance is poor.
When was the last time you called the police upon hearing an alarm bell or siren?
Even a monitored system can be a disaster waiting to happen.
A skilled burglar usually limits his time inside to a mere four minutes,
which is enough time to grab some of the most valuable things you own. He assumes
that he tripped a monitored system. This typical system does not call the central
station immediately. There is a time delay of 30 to 60 seconds to allow a forgetful
owner to shut off the system. Thereafter, several seconds elapse until the information
appears on the central station computer. The monitoring agent then needs several
more seconds to read the information. He (she) then punches in the phone number
of the victim to talk to the home owner. The phone rings for another 20 to 30 seconds
before he thinks that this may be a real burglary. More seconds go by as the agent
calls the police.
Perhaps, after several rings someone answers. Over the next minute the officer takes
down the information and hangs up. The officer then passes the information onto
the dispatcher who reads it and then gets on the radio and attempts to contact an
appropriate squad car. The officer in the car jots down the address and then takes
a few seconds to decide the best way to get there. It is unlikely that the trip
will be made in less than a minute. If you total this up you will have a number
much larger than four minutes.
But, there is more. Police don't like to respond to burglaries. Police risk
their lives everyday as a part of their job. They are trained and ready to place
themselves in danger to protect your life. But, when it comes to dying to protect
your property, that may be a little different. Trapping a burglar in a house is
not a healthy thing to do. An ambush is difficult to predict and even more difficult
to protect against. You must assume a less than maxed out police response to any
burglary call.
Thus a monitored alarm merely guarantees that the police will be first on the scene
to assess the losses. The implied claims of the security industry are deceptive
at best. A burglar alarm threatens an intruder with a response. But, in reality,
a timely response is a rare thing. We must face the fact that the human element
is the weak link in any security system.
What is needed is a system that can deal with an intruder forcefully, ending the
burglary attempt without the need of human assistance. Fortunately, a security
system delivering this level of performance does exist -- our own OC pepper spray
antiburglary devices!
With thousands of installations over 25 years, this concept has safely ended numerous
burglary attempts and may have saved several lives in the process. This method of
filling the security gap has been proven over and over with a near perfect string
of successes.
So, why don't the big companies have it? Because it eliminates the "need"
for monitoring which is where they make most of their money. At $30 per month monitoring
fees add up to $1,800.00 in just five years.
There is a better way. Don't settle for the overpriced illusion of security when
you can have the real thing!
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