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9/5/10

Who Says Crime Doesn’t Pay?

Posted Jul 19 2010 by Marc Chasewith 0 Comments

This post doesn’t have much to do with the subject of credit repair or debt relief (at least not on the surface), but after reading it on my RSS feed this morning, I just had to share it anyway.

It seems the Chief of Police in Oakland, CA released a list of 44 different crimes – including grand theft, vandalism, and even identity theft – the department will no longer respond to due to budget cuts and lack of manpower.

A partial list of the crimes that no longer receive the attention they warrant includes:

• burglary
• theft
• embezzlement
• grand theft
• grand theft: dog
• identity theft
• false information to peace officer
• required to register as sex or arson offender
• required to register as a Raiders fan
• dump waste or offensive matter
• discard appliance with lock
• loud music
• possess forged notes
• pass fictitious check
• obtain money by false voucher
• fraudulent use of access cards
• stolen license plate
• embezzlement by an employee (over $ 400)
• extortion
• attempted extortion
• false personification of other
• injure telephone/ power line
• interfere with power line
• unauthorized cable TV connection
• vandalism
• administer/expose poison to another's

As you can see, this list runs the gamut from mundane (stolen cable TV) to pretty damn serious (embezzlement/extortion).  If you happen to be a victim of any of these crimes, you can let the police know via their website, though what happens from there is really anyone’s guess.

So why the decrease in police responses?  Blame the recession (again).  The department was forced to lay off as many as 80 officers – mostly new recruits – in an attempt to close the $30

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