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Small
Business Crime Prevention
Crime,
burglary, robbery, vandalism, shoplifting, employee theft,
and fraud - costs businesses billions of dollars each year.
Crime can be particularly devastating to small businesses,
which lose both customers and employees when crime and fear
claim a neighborhood.
When
small businesses are victims of crime, they often react by
changing their hours of operation, raising their prices to
cover their losses, relocating outside the community, or
simply closing. Fear of crime isolates businesses, much
like fear isolates individuals - and this isolation
increases vulnerability to crime.
Helping
small businesses reduce and prevent crime must be a
community effort. Law enforcement can work with owners to
improve security and design their spaces to reduce risk.
Small businesses can join together in such efforts as
Business Watch to alert each other to crime patterns and
suspicious activities. They can help young people in the
community learn job-seeking skills and give them jobs, when
possible.
Finally, businesses must reach out to others - law
enforcement, civic groups, schools, churches, and youth
groups - to fight violence, drugs, and other crime and
create a safer community for all.
Laying a Foundation for Prevention
Take a
hard look at your business - its physical layout,
employees, hiring practices, and overall security. Assess
its vulnerability to all kinds of crime, from burglary to
embezzlement. Some basic prevention principles include:
Provide
training for all employees - including cleaning staff - so
they are familiar with security procedures and know your
expectations.
Use
good locks, safes, and alarm systems. If you have
questions, seek the help of law enforcement. Keep detailed,
up-to-date records. Store back-up copies off the premises.
If you are ever victimized, you can assess losses more
easily and provide useful information for law enforcement
investigations.
Establish and enforce clear policies about employee theft,
employee substance abuse, crime reporting, opening and
closing the business, and other security procedures. Mark
equipment - registers, adding machines, calculators,
computers, and typewriters - with an identification number
(for example, tax identification or license number). Post
the Operation Identification warning sticker in your
storefront window. Keep a record of all identification
numbers off the premises with other important records.
Consider the cost of each security improvement you make
against the potential savings through loss reduction.
Remember to assess the impact on employees and customers.
Crimes
against businesses are usually crimes of opportunity.
Failure to take good security precautions invites crime
into a business.
Burglary
Prevention
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Make sure all outside entrances and
inside security doors have deadbolt locks. If you use
padlocks, they should be made of steel and kept locked at
all times. Remember to remove serial numbers from your
locks, to prevent unauthorized keys from being made.
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All outside or security doors should be
metal-lined and secured with metal security crossbars. Pin
all exposed hinges to prevent removal.
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Windows should have secure locks and
burglar-resistant glass. Consider installing metal grates
on all your windows except display windows.
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Remove all expensive items from window
displays at night and make sure you can see easily into
your business after closing.
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Light the inside and outside of your
business, especially around doors, windows, skylights, or
other entry points. Consider installing covers over
exterior lights and power sources to deter tampering.
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Check the parking lot for good lighting
and unobstructed views.
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Keep your cash register in plain view
from the outside of your business, so police can monitor it
during the day or night. Leave it open and empty after
closing.
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Be sure your safe is fireproof and
securely anchored. It should be kept in plain view. Leave
it open when it’s empty, use it to lock up valuables when
you close. Remember to change the combination when an
employee who has had access to it leaves your business.
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Before you invest in an alarm system,
check with several companies and decide what level of
security fits your needs. Learn how to use your system
properly. Check the system daily, and run a test when
closing.
Robbery
Prevention
Robbery
doesn’t occur as often as other crimes against businesses,
but the potential for loss can be much greater from a
single incident. In addition, robbery involves force or
threat of force and can result in serious injury or death.
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Greet every person who enters the
business in a friendly manner. Personal contact can
discourage a would-be criminal.
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Keep windows clear of displays or signs
and make sure your business is well lighted. Check the
layout of your store, eliminating any blind spots that may
hide a robbery in progress.
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Provide information about your security
systems to employees only on a "need-to-know" basis.
Instruct your employees to report any suspicious activity
or person immediately and write down the information for
future reference.
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Place cash registers in the front section
of the store. This increases the chances of someone
spotting a robbery in progress and reporting it to the
police.
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Keep small amounts of cash in the
register to reduce losses. Use a drop safe into which large
bills and excess cash are dropped by employees and cannot
be retrieved by them. Post signs alerting would-be robbers
of this procedure.
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Make bank deposits often and during
business hours. Don’t establish a pattern; take different
routes at different times during the day. Ask a police
officer to escort you to the bank whenever possible.
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Ask local law enforcement what to do in
case you are robbed. Make sure your address is visible so
emergency vehicles can easily find your business.
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If a robber confronts you or your
employees, cooperate. Merchandise and cash can always be
replaced - people can’t!
Credit
Card Fraud
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Train employees to follow each credit
card company’s authorization procedures.
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Be skeptical of a customer with only one
credit card and one piece of identification.
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Be aware of the customer who makes
several small purchases by check or credit card that are
under the amount for manager approval.
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Is the item being purchased one that
could be easily fenced for cash? (Examples include
televisions, stereos, cameras, and other portable items.)
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If you are suspicious of the purchaser,
make a note of appearance, companions, any vehicle used,
and identification presented. Call your local police
department.
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Look for "ghost" numbers or letters. Many
times criminals will change the numbers and/or name on a
stolen card. To do this they either melt the original name
and numbers off or file them off. Both of these processes
can leave faint imprints of the original characters.
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Examine the signature strip on the credit
card. A criminal may cover the real card owner’s signature
with "White-Out" and sign it on the new strip.
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Check to see if the signature on the card
compares favorably with the signature on the sales slip.
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Source: Credit Card and Computer Fraud,
published by the Department of the Treasury, United States
Secret Service.)
Check
Fraud
Many
fraudulent checks are visibly phony. By paying close
attention to a check’s appearance, you can often detect a
possible bad check before accepting it as payment. When you
see one or more of the following telltale signs, you may be
looking at a phony check. Protect yourself against possible
losses by requiring management approval of the check or
asking for an alternative form of payment.
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No perforation on check edges. Apparently
altered writing or erasures. Water spots or alterations of
check’s color or graphic background. Numbered under 500
(new account).
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Post-dated
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Glossy rather than dull finish of
magnetic ink
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Signature does not match imprinted name
and ID
Shoplifting Prevention
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Businesses lose billions of dollars each
year to shoplifting, and then often must pass this loss on
to the customers through higher prices.
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Train employees in how to reduce
opportunities for shoplifting and how to apprehend
shoplifters. Work with law enforcement to teach employees
what actions may signal shoplifting.
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Keep the store neat and orderly. Use
mirrors to eliminate "blind spots" in corners that might
hide shoplifters. Merchandise should be kept away from
store exits to prevent grab-and-run situations.
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Keep displays full and orderly, so
employees can see at a glance if something is missing. Keep
expensive merchandise in locked cases. Limit the number of
items employees remove at any one time for customers to
examine.
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Design the exits of the business so all
persons must pass by security personnel or store employees.
You may want to use an electronic article surveillance
system or other inventory control devices.
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The cash register should be inaccessible
to customers, locked, and monitored at all times. Place it
near the front of the store, so employees can also monitor
customers coming and going.
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Dressing rooms and rest rooms should be
watched at all times. Keep dressing rooms locked and limit
the number of items taken in.
Vandalism
Prevention
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Annual damage estimates are in the
billions, and businesses pass the costs of vandalism on to
customers through higher prices. Most vandals are young
people - from grade schoolers to teens to young adults.
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Clean up vandalism as soon as it happens
- replace signs, repair equipment, paint over graffiti.
Once the graffiti is gone, use landscape designs (such as
prickly shrubs or closely planted hedges), building
materials (such as hard-to-mark surfaces), lighting, or
fences to discourage vandals.
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Work with law enforcement to set up a
hotline to report vandalism.
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If you see someone vandalizing a
property, report it to the police. Remember, vandalism is a
crime.
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Protect your business by installing and
using good lighting and locking gates. Eliminate places
where someone might hide, such as trees, shrubbery,
stairwells, and alleys.
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Have a community meeting on vandalism to
discuss its victims, costs, and solutions. Include young
people in all vandalism prevention efforts.
Employee
Theft Prevention
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Employee theft accounts for a large
amount of business losses.
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Establish a written policy that outlines
employee responsibilities, standards of honesty, and
general security procedures and consequences for not
following them.
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Make sure new employees read it,
understand it, and sign it as a condition of employment.
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Follow strict hiring practices. Verify
all information and contact all the references listed on an
application. Consider running a credit check.
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Keep accurate records on cash flow,
inventory, equipment, and supplies. Have it checked
regularly by someone other than the person responsible for
maintaining it.
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Limit access to keys, the safe,
computerized records, alarm codes, and engrave, "DO NOT
DUPLICATE" on store keys. Change locks and access codes
when an employee is terminated.
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If internal theft is discovered, take
action quickly. Contact your local law enforcement agency
and be sure to send a message to your employees that theft
will not be tolerated.
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Reward employees for uncovering security
problems and for doing a good job.
Learn more
about organizing a Business Watch
Modeled
after the Neighborhood Watch concept, Business Watch seeks
to reduce commercial crime and the fear of crime from both
the shopper’s and the shop owner’s point of view. The
following steps are the most important concepts behind
Business Watch:
Get to
know the people who operate the neighboring businesses.
They are your neighbors for eight or more hours a day.
Making personal contact is the best way to get acquainted.
Make an effort to introduce yourself to others - nearby
residents, schools, civic groups, libraries, and clubs - in
the neighborhood.
Watch
and report. Report suspicious behavior to law enforcement
immediately, even if it means taking a chance on being
wrong. A telephone tree is an effective means of sharing
information with other merchants. Should a problem develop,
each merchant is responsible for calling one or two others
on the tree.
Secure
your property. Contact your local police or sheriff’s
department to conduct a security survey of your business.
Ask for their advice on lights, alarms, locks, and other
security measures.
Engrave
all valuable office equipment and tools. Use an
identification number - a tax identification number,
license, or other unique number. Check with law enforcement
for their recommendation.
Aggressively advertise your Business Watch group. Post
signs and stickers saying that your block of businesses is
organized to prevent crime by watching out for and
reporting suspicious activities to law enforcement.
Adapted
from Organizing a Business Watch, published by the City of
Portland, Office of Neighborhood Associations.)
Looking for Community Partners?
Chambers of Commerce
Chambers of Commerce exists in thousands of communities.
They can help start a Business Watch, offer crime
prevention information to area businesses, or organize
seminars on "hot" topics, like bad checks or credit card
fraud.
Business
Associations
Merchants may join together to address a problem that
directly affects their business operations. Some examples
include poor street lighting, lack of police patrols,
parking, loitering, or prostitution. A business or
merchant’s association could price employment for youth,
community improvements, or funding for a manual on small
business security.
Service
Clubs
Many communities have local chapters of such service groups
as Exchange Clubs, Kiwanis, Lions, Junior League, General
Federation of Women’s Clubs, Jaycees, Rotary, and
Optimists. These groups take on a variety of community and
business service projects. They often have many members
from the local business community.
Special
Interest Associations/Groups
Businesses often join others with similar interests. Retail
merchants as a whole, specialty stores, computer retailers,
drug stores, grocers, cleaners, restaurants, or convenience
stores may all have associations in a city or region.
Private
Security
Increased partnerships between business groups, private
security, and police can enhance each other’s efforts to
protect commercial areas.
Community
Associations
Business groups can find effective partners in community
and neighborhood associations. Both groups have a strong
stake in thriving residential and commercial areas. They
are often well versed in strategies for securing physical
improvements such as street lighting or road repairs. In
partnership with business, they can also reach out to help
solve problems that affect the entire community’s well
being - such as homelessness, lack of jobs, or the need for
battered women’s shelters.
Officer Ken Davis,
Midvale Police,
(801) 256-2512
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