(live here in the neighborhoods) - A wave of break-ins from sleeping quarters from the eyes of residents in the Ramat Eshkol neighborhood in recent times. Residents report that the sense of security is being undermined and in the meantime they are trying to cope with neighborhood watch patrols.
Number of hacks per day
Residents of Ramat Eshkol tell Lehi Pa that in recent weeks the neighborhood has been suffering from a plague of burglaries. The chairman of the Ramat Eshkol neighborhood, Amit Gonen: "In the last two weeks we have witnessed a wave of break-ins in the neighborhood. There were cases where several break-ins occurred in a day. Sometimes this is done in the evening and sometimes at night. To deal with the situation, several residents of the neighborhood got together and started holding tours in the evenings and nights," says Gonen.
"A few years ago I already applied to the municipality for the installation of cameras in the neighborhood to deal with the problem of break-ins. Unfortunately, for various reasons, cameras have not been installed to date. I hope that both the police and the municipality will increase patrols in the neighborhood and help us restore security to the residents."
"3 apartments were broken into on Friday evening"
The resident of the neighborhood who lives on Raul Wallenberg Street and whose housing unit was broken into, says: "On Friday evening (26/1/24) I heard noises from the western part of the house. We have a housing unit and I heard noises from there. I rang the door of the unit and it was quiet. We called our tenant on his cell phone And we asked his permission to enter," she says and continues: "We entered and saw that the whole apartment was turned upside down and that the shutter and the window in the living room were open. Apparently when I approached there the burglar heard me say that the window was open and then he jumped out of the window. It is not high, and apparently a car was waiting for him.
Earlier I noticed that there was a car in the driveway that I didn't recognize. The police were at the housing unit, the tenant had a watch and checks stolen. The break-in was at 19:30, and I realized that there was another break-in at an apartment on another street in the neighborhood.
On Saturday morning I talked to one of the neighbors in the building who told me that in one of the apartments in our building the window in the kitchen was open. I called the owner of the apartment whose window was open, who could not remember whether she had left it open or closed. She checked with her tenant who said she left it closed.
The owner of the apartment came to check and found that both the window and the front door were open. The apartment itself was empty because the tenant had just finished the lease, so there was no point in calling the police.
Apparently that evening they broke into 3 apartments. Two apartments in our building and another apartment on Albert Schweitzer Street. That's a lot for one evening in one neighborhood. A few years ago there was also a wave of break-ins here and I remember that the police caught the thieves. It seems that it should be done now as well."
"People have lost faith in the system"
Idan, one of the founders of the neighborhood watch, tells how the neighborhood is trying to deal with the wave of break-ins: "It is a kind of neighborhood watch, volunteers who patrol without weapons in the evening hours. The watch was established at the beginning of the war, but in practice we do it for about three weeks, following the plague of break-ins in the neighborhood. Residents are afraid and we We are trying to help. There are no particular successes, with the exception of calls to the police in situations where we have seen suspicious people or suspicious vehicles. Contact with the police only exists in cases where we have identified something suspicious. I think people have lost faith in the system and I know that in almost all neighborhoods in Haifa a similar organization has been established and is running that tries to restore a certain sense of security, Not necessarily in the context of the war."
The Haifa Police stated that they are not aware of a high number of break-ins in the Ramat Eshkol neighborhood.
Oh, house break-ins, I thought there was a wave of break-ins that the residents of the neighborhood were walking around without clothes in the streets and doing sex-swaps and orgies. silly me
You haven't reported on this yet - no, it's just that there is also that at the Eshkol level
Damicolo Police…
Arm yourself with an introduction only the power of thieves understand and you must not pity them.
We have seen what the Begetz are doing regarding the protection, the burglaries and the thefts against the farmers and the contractors and the Jewish business owners.
There is nothing to be done, the residents must take the law into their own hands until the democrats fall
Immediately place cameras for close supervision and control of all the movements of the residents on all the streets of the city, limit the freedom of movement and expression and place a policeman on every house in the city....
Yes, of course, there are those who tried to bring politics into the matter of burglaries. One might think that there were no burglaries at Bar Lev, burglaries were and always will be. Unfortunately, the police cannot be everywhere and the responsibility also lies with the citizens who sleep standing up.
The chairman of Amitgunen is called 😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆
The Israel Police will know how to handle it. Have a lovely day
shoot to hit
The risk passes from the victim to the thief!!
The gangs of the terrorist Ben Gabir are busy beating the protesters and families of the kidnapped instead of doing their job
So many incidents of break-ins, pig thefts and fires that Haifa became "Chicago". Really scary!
What is happening to the mayor? she does not
Reading what's happening in her city?
What about security for residents?????
The police don't catch the car burners. How do you catch a simple thief?