Crime & Safety

'Porch Pirates' Apparently Hit Apartments In Ashburn

Multiple opened packages from delivery companies were found in a wooded area behind an apartment complex in Ashburn: LCSO

ASHBURN, VA — What's that old saying? Something along the lines of, "If it looks like a suspicious event and smells like a suspicious event, then it's a suspicious event." Well, this item on Thursday's Loudoun County Sheriff's Office crime report is labeled as a suspicious event, but it might as well labeled as a burglary.

Namely, last Friday and Saturday, someone found multiple opened packages in the wooded area of an apartment complex in the 43000 block of Thistledown Terrace. The boxes were from various delivery companies and were addressed to residents of the apartment complex. (For more local news, click here to sign up for real-time news alerts. Also, like us on Facebook, and if you have an iPhone, click here to get the free Patch iPhone app.)

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Yep, the residents apparently were hit by so-called porch pirates, who prowl around neighborhoods waiting to pounce. In a move also dubbed "front porch shopping," observant thieves will follow delivery trucks and steal recently delivered packages from porches and stoops.

Police and security experts have shared some reminders on how to thwart "porch pirates" and ensure you receive your packages:

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  • If possible, have your package delivered to a location where it can be received by a trusted person.
  • Request that the shipper holds the package at their facility for pickup.
  • Track deliveries online and confirm delivery has occurred.
  • Insure valuable items.
  • Provide delivery instructions so packages are left out of sight from the street.
  • Watch out for vehicles following delivery vans through neighborhoods. Some thieves will simply shadow deliver drivers and go from house to house stealing newly delivered packages.
  • When sending packages, take them to a post office or other shipping facility rather than leaving them outside your home for pickup. Let the person you are sending the package to know to expect the package.
  • Show off your home security system; make sure you have a sign in the front yard. If you have security cameras, make sure potential thieves know they're there, and if you have a doorbell camera, use it.
  • Sign up for email notifications from FedEx, UPS and businesses like Amazon and Urban Outfitters to track your package from initial shipment to its arrival at your home or the recipient's address if you have the gift delivered directly.

Image via Patch file

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