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WPCNR POLICE GAZETTE. Statement from Commissioner of Public Safety David Chong. May 17, 2011:
Commissioner of Public Safety David Chong adds this information to the news of the arrests of three White Plains youths (all 17 years of age) Sunday morning in possession of stolen electronic devices that they admitted taking from unlocked cars. Chong gave WPCNR this statement:
“The City and surrounding communities have experienced a rash of car break-in larcenies in the past few weeks. Only two days ago Mount Pleasant Police reported approximately 40 cars had been broken into overnight.
The White Plains Police Department quickly identified a pattern through our COMPSTAT process and through the good efforts of the command staff all the way down to the officers who carried out this decoy operation and put together a plan of apprehension.
We shifted officers from both our Narcotics Unit and Neighborhood Conditions Unit and placed people and decoy vehicles through-out the city where these larcenies were being committed.
This weekend, our efforts paid off as a group of teenagers spotted one of our decoy cars in the south end of the City and went to open its doors. Undercover units stopped the youths and recovered numerous stolen items strewn around their car. The youths made admissions to numerous break-ins and were subsequently charged. The case is still active as we try to identify all the stolen property recovered and the victims. Additional charges may also be added.
I must remind those who have criminal intent that our Police Decoy and Plainclothes operations are continuing through-out the City. We are also working closely with our surrounding police jurisdictions.
I ask all residents to use good common security sense and protect your valuables by removing them from plain sight and locking and securing your cars and home doors and windows. These are opportunist thieves, if it isn’t locked down or out of plain sight they will take anything of value.
High on their list is electronic equipment, car GPS devices, lap-top computer’s, electronics, I-pods and pocketbooks left in plain sight or unsecured in automobiles. Just because your car is in your driveway, you should still lock the doors and close the windows.
Don’t be an easy target, just take a few moments and secure your valuables away.




