
Owner-Applied Numbers
Sheriff’s Department Urges: Report All Ag Crime
By Liza Teixeira, CFBF Rural Crime Prevention
Intern
What’s the biggest problem County Sheriff’s
Departments face when it comes to rural crimes? It’s not the fact that thieves
are relentless and will steal anything they can turn a buck on, or that rural
crimes happen in remote, sometimes hard to reach locations—it’s actually
property owners who don’t take the time to report crimes when they occur. Only
10% of crimes related to agriculture in California are reported to law
enforcement each year, making it impossible for your Sheriff’s Department to
even know that a crime has taken place, much less be able to solve it.
So why should you report a crime on your property?
Detective Donnie Schwandt, President of the California Rural Crime Prevention
Task Force says, “We need to have as many pieces of the puzzle as possible to
solve a crime, make an arrest and get a conviction.”
Even though the few brass valves that went missing
from your property last week don’t seem ‘report worthy’, they may offer clues
that help a detective catch the criminals who have been stealing copper wire,
fuel or tractors from the area before they have a chance to come back for more.
“Complete knowledge of what’s going on in a county allows officers to recognize
a pattern of activity or a ring that may be operating on a larger scale. With
only a portion of the information available, that task is next to impossible,”
added Schwandt.
The first thing to do when you suspect a crime has
been committed on your property is to stay away! Just walking the site to
checkout the damage could destroy evidence like a shoe print or other
indicator. Know the number to your local Ag Crimes Task Force or the sheriff’s
department and call them immediately. A deputy will contact you to take a
report and investigate the situation.
Finally, Detective Schwandt says it’s important to
report crimes and suspicious activity because law enforcement resources are
allocated based on calls for service. “Statistics talk and the only way to
justify and maintain funding to keep deputies assigned to rural areas is to show
the true extent of agriculture crime in California,” said Schwandt.
You can report an agriculture crime online with the
Monterey County Sheriff’s Department at
http://www.co.monterey.ca.us/sheriff/rep_crime.asp
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