Crime & Safety
5 Ways To Stop Porch Pirates In Medfield
Package thefts are a growing problem as online shopping explodes. Medfield police offer some tips to thwart porch pirates.
MEDFIELD, MA — Online shopping has reached an all-time high due to the coronavirus pandemic as package thieves gear up for the holiday season in Medfield and across the country.
Police Chief Michelle Guerette said there is little the department can do to prevent thefts because they are random, but the department encourages safe practices to help residents from becoming victims.
"Residents can request that the delivery person rings the doorbell upon dropping the package," Guerette said. "We also encourage them to stipulate dropping the packages close to the door or behind the house. COVID-19 has changed things in respect to more people being home to receive packages; however, it also has affected how many people are now utilizing online purchasing."
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Guerette said the best option for people working is to have their packages delivered to their workplace.
Package Theft Across the U.S.
More than 5.5 million Americans have been victimized by package thefts over the past year, according to Finder, a personal finance comparison website, in a study released in November.
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About $5.4 billion worth of items were stolen in package thefts from November 2019 to November 2020, the Finder determined.
Because of the busy online shopping month of December, that number is likely to grow by the end of the year.
Fewer people were in the nation’s malls on Black Friday, and Cyber Monday is expected to become the busiest online shopping day of all time when all sales are totaled, according to The Associated Press.
Overall holiday season sales in 2020 are expected to rise 0.9 percent, with a 36 percent jump in online sales, a study by the research company eMarketer shows.
Porch pirates could see a prime opportunity to take advantage of the expected spike in packages left at front doors.
They usually get away with it, too. Only 11 percent of victims said the culprits were caught, according to a 2019 study by C+R Research.
Who Steals A Package?
Men are found to be more likely to be both package thieves and victims of the crime, according to the Finder study. With 5.29 percent of men admitting having stolen a package compared with 0.85 percent of women, men are more than 500 percent more likely to be package thieves than women, the study found.
Seventeen percent of men say a package of theirs was stolen during the past year, compared with 11 percent for women.
Still, 86 percent of the nearly 2,000 participants in the study said they have not experienced a package theft since this time last year.
Prevention Tips
Here are five tips Finder shared to help Americans keep from becoming a victim of a package theft:
- Try curbside pickup: Drive to the store; most of them offer curbside pickup options.
- Use a post office box: This will ensure the package is handled by a professional at the YOUR PATCH TOWN post office.
- Video surveillance: Doorbell cameras such as Ring can allow homeowners to scare away the thief in real time.
- Require a signature: This way, the package cannot go unattended.
- Have it sent to your workplace: Public places typically have a greater chance of using security cameras.
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