By George P. Hassett
The city’s 311 constituent services hot line is moving beyond potholes and getting tough on crime. The almost two-year-old call center has traditionally been used by residents to report constituent concerns or ask for city services in neighborhoods, but beginning this week 311 will be used to help stem the rising tide of car break-ins and portable electronic thefts.
Somerville Police have partnered with the city’s 311 Call Center to create WRAP, the Web Registry Anti-Theft Program. City officials say WRAP will use online and over-the-phone registration of serial numbers to help police track lost or stolen devices from Somerville. It will come in particularly handy, they said, in combating the skyrocketing increase in car break-ins.
From Jan. 1 to Aug. 5 of this year there were 465 motor vehicle larcenies. In the same time period two years ago, there were 143. That is a 225 percent jump in Somerville car break-ins. Police say the main targets are portable electronic devices such as Global Position Systems (GPS), iPods and satellite radios. In an informal survey of break-in victims, Police Captain Paul Upton said half had GPS devices stolen, and 25 to 35 percent had iPods and satellite radios taken. In the last month, police have arrested six people for larceny from a vehicle.
And that is where WRAP is supposed to come in. Mayor Joseph A. Curtatone said that by registering portable electronic devices, residents can help police identify and trace stolen property.
Acting Police Chief Robert R. Bradley said WRAP will also deter break-ins. He said residents who register receive a yellow sticker they can attach to their property and warn would-be thieves to stay away.
“If someone does break into your car, WRAP stickers send a message that we can trace these devices – and we can more easily determine whether a suspect is holding stolen property. WRAP can help our detectives make cases – and it increases the chance that a lost or misplaced device will get back to its rightful owner,” he said.
City officials will also file any information they receive on larcenies with www.juststolen.net, a database used by police across the country to track stolen goods.
“Once you’re registered with WRAP, you can call the police if one of your devices goes missing, and they will be able to get the information from us to track it. Plus, if an honest person finds and turns in a device that you’ve lost, the police will have a way to identify you as the owner and return your property,” said Sean Murphy, director of constituent services for the city.
Murphy said victims of car break-ins or other thefts should always file a police report, but that having serial numbers pre-registered with WRAP can aid in follow-up and investigations.
Maybe just maybe the cash from the famous inside job or that lost desk? Please call 311 and hold your breath.
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Posted by: flowing mindspin | November 24, 2007 at 01:11 PM
I just called 311, asking if they knew how I could get back my stolen wallet. Within 15 minutes somebody came to my door and returned it to me. Amazing!!!!
Posted by: Disgruntled | November 24, 2007 at 02:40 PM
I just called 311, asking if they knew how I could get back my stolen wallet. Within 15 minutes somebody came to my door and returned it to me.
Posted by: vehcile wrap | March 17, 2008 at 04:35 AM
I was just pulling up to the Winter Hill school because one of my kids had practice there and noticed that a women was talking to a Police Officer because minutes before I arrived someone smashed her window, whether for fun or theft I don't know, she seemed distraught and the Police Officer seemed to be bothered, probably knowing he would never catch the little morons commiting these types of crime.
During the past year of using that school or just riding through the area, God forbid I stop at School and Medford to buy something at that store from hell that poor Asian women owns, I've noticed more than one roving pack of "wolves" causing trouble or trying to intimidate anyone who crossess their path. My kids used to go down to the Winter Hill's school playgroung to play basketball in the playground but I had to put a halt to that because of their safety.
What the heck is going on in that area? Where are these punks coming from? Has anyone else noticed the difference in that neighborhood?
Posted by: Winter Hill NeighborHOOD | March 17, 2008 at 03:29 PM
Sorry, not School and Medford but Central and Medford. My bad.
Posted by: Winter Hill NeighborHOOD | March 17, 2008 at 03:31 PM
Great info I liked the way you handle it.
Posted by: Vehicle Wrap | April 19, 2008 at 09:25 AM