Neighbor likely avoided a home invasion by lying

I stepped out to get the mail today when Rob, a guy who lives across from me yelled "Yo, Frank! You got a minute?"

Of course I do, so Rob came running over to tell me that last night at 9:47pm, someone knocked on his door. No one in his family was expecting anyone that late on Christmas Eve, so he looked out the peephole and brought up the door camera app on his phone, and he sees this pretty 20-something blond girl standing there with her hair wet from the rain, hugging herself and looking cold and scared.

Even though she was kind of a pathetic site, he waved off his wife and teenaged son who followed him to the door, and they backed away. The girl knocked again, and he kept watching her while he yelled through the door, "Can I help you?"

Girl: Yes, I need help, please.
Rob: Alright, but, on police advice, I'm just letting you know I have several cameras out there, okay?

Rob said the girl's mouth dropped open a little, and then she kind of leaned back and looked off to her left, and then turned back toward his door, looking at the floor with a knitted brow, suddenly switching from looking helpless to looking "half worried, half angry, and deep in thought."

Rob doesn't have any cameras except on his doorbell, but he yelled out, "Like I said, police told me I'm supposed to let strangers know there's a camera on that lamp-post over there, one above this door, and each corner of the...."

The girl looked at each "camera" Rob listed, and took off running before he finished saying "each corner of the house." He watched her out his front window. She ran to a car that was parked a couple houses down, and it sped off past his house and off toward the main road out of here. The whole thing happened in under 5 minutes.

Rob would have lied about cameras in any case, but he did noticed a few red-flags: it was raining heavily, but the girl's hair was only slightly wet, her clothes weren't wet at all, and her face wasn't reddened from the cold, so she'd obviously just gotten out of a nice warm car, but there was no car in sight. Also, she had a phone in her pocket, so she could have called a friend or a parent or the police if she really needed help.

Anyway, like Rob said, if you tell a thief you've got cameras, they're gonna see cameras.
 

...pretty 20-something blond girl standing there with her hair wet from the rain
I had to deal with this rouse before, I recognized it right away. In my case it was 2 pretty 20-something blond girls that came onto my property on a Summer day. I saw them jump the fence, and I immediately came out to confront them. They wanted to come inside my house and get a drink of water. I told them to wait in the yard, I went and got them a each a bottle of water, gave the water to them and directed them back out into the road. I went back in the house and watched them walk away....one just threw her bottle of water over my neighbor's fence.
 
Yes. They take your money first, then your guns...if you have any, then anything they can sell at a pawn shop or trade for drugs and more guns. And it's always 3 or more home-invaders - at least one to hold you and your family at gunpoint while the rest ransack your house.
So if any hot men in distress come to the door I should tell them to go to hell? Lol
 
Home invasions here in the city are usually black males and they force their way in. Beat up people in the house.

In a more recent case, it was determined that they invaded the wrong house and murdered an elderly woman and beat up the grandson.

I'm trying to understand what a pretty blonde wants.
 
Yes. They take your money first, then your guns...if you have any, then anything they can sell at a pawn shop or trade for drugs and more guns. And it's always 3 or more home-invaders - at least one to hold you and your family at gunpoint while the rest ransack your house.

Yes. They take your money first, then your guns...if you have any, then anything they can sell at a pawn shop or trade for drugs and more guns. And it's always 3 or more home-invaders - at least one to hold you and your family at gunpoint while the rest ransack your house.
I put a laughing emoji and I didn't mean it and I can't edit it out. I did not mean laughing, sorry
 
I was taught by the best of the best how to defend myself and how to use a pistol. My dad taught me the long gun as a kid and my ex the handgun. We used to go to indoor practice ranges near Washington, dc.
I am never not armed inside my home, apt. I never open my door unless I know who it is. If it ever came to me or he, I'd be sure to have him/her fall within the apt all the way.
 
Yes. They take your money first, then your guns...if you have any, then anything they can sell at a pawn shop or trade for drugs and more guns. And it's always 3 or more home-invaders - at least one to hold you and your family at gunpoint while the rest ransack your house.
You seem to know the protocol very well. Hmmmmmm.
 
You seem to know the protocol very well. Hmmmmmm.
Some people know how to do certain things and that might tie in with their positions. For myself I was taught how to do things to defend myself, things that do not require a weapon. But there was one time a very well trained dog paid off.
 
An opened door can be construed legally as an invitation to enter. I don't open my door to anyone unless they're expected.
"The door was open, so I went in." That wouldn't hold up as reasonable cause to enter a stranger's home. This is burglary, or at least unauthorized entry, which also has serious legal consequences.

"I heard screams and cries for help, and the door was open, so I went in." That's not only reasonable, it's heroism. Cops would say to wait outside and call them instead, but a court would likely throw out any complaints.

I've been following a very recent case called "Door-Dash Girl." It's really interesting; you should check it out.

Door-Dash girl is given instructions to "leave delivery at the door." Door is slightly ajar when she arrives, and customer is a dude who's passed out on his couch with his jeans and briefs down around his ankles. She saw IT! She saw his wiener!!!!

So, what does she do? Well, naturally, she leaned into the living room to record him on her phone, posted the video on TikTok, and, 3 days later, pressed charges of Sexual Assault against an unconscious dude laying on his couch with his limp, scary, evil wiener hanging out.

I bet you can guess how this is going to go for ol' Door-Dash Girl.
 

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