Orlando Sentinel - Be Aware

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No - Not trying to give you one more thing to worry about as that treasured Disney vacation draws near - just a word that you have to be alert.

Orlando-area vacation homes draw tourists - and thieves


Eloisa Ruano Gonzalez |Sentinel Staff Writer November 11, 2008

FOUR CORNERS - British tourists and investors have become targets of yet another wave of crimes: vacation-home burglaries.

Jean Crichton and other homeowners are facing problems with thieves ripping down pool screens and breaking down doors to get into the short-term rentals -- even during the daytime. They are targeting well-furnished vacation homes in neighborhoods near Disney theme parks, which have been popular among British travelers, to snag computers, flat-screen TVs, gaming systems, iPods and money.

Law-enforcement officials have tried to handle the growing problem for nearly a decade. But the number of burglaries is back on the rise. Osceola County sheriff's spokeswoman Twis Lizasuain said burglaries more than doubled last year. More than 180 short-term rental homes were burglarized in the Osceola portion of Four Corners in 2007. In 2006, there were only 83 burglaries. So far this year, there have been 157, she said.

Likewise, Polk County sheriff's officials say they've seen a nearly 31 percent increase in residential burglaries in the Four Corners and the growing corridor around Interstate 4 and U.S. Highway 27, Davenport and parts of Haines City.

Most break-ins occur when guests and residents aren't home.

Most Four Corner vacation homes are in Polk and Osceola counties.

"It's not only worried me for the security of my home but for the guests I'm renting to," said Crichton, 63, of Scotland. Travelers from Australia, Brazil, Canada and New Zealand often stay at her rental home near West U.S. Highway 192, which has been broken into twice in less than a year. Two 42-inch flat-screen televisions, liquor and pillows were among the items stolen.

Burglars this year have hit about 30 vacation homes in Indian Creek, a 462-home community off West U.S. Highway 192 in Osceola County. In 2006, burglars broke into 17 homes, former homeowners association vice president John Abrahamsen said. And there were 23 burglaries in 2007.

"I see it [the problem] escalating because of the state of the economy," said Abrahamsen, who resigned from his post with the association in September. "Desperate people do desperate things."

The Indian Creek Common Facility District, which is in charge of maintaining the community, plans to set up cameras this week, said Fran Brown, district member and Indian Creek homeowner. She said license-plate numbers will be recorded on vehicles entering and exiting the complex, in an effort to deter thieves.

But the best deterrent, she said, is setting house alarms.

Karen Gilson, former president of the Indian Creek homeowners association whose rental home also was hit by thieves, said breaking into one of the community's homes is a "field day" for burglars.

"We stock the houses so they're better equipped than hotels," Gilson said.

With new tourists often coming in and out, she said it's easy for burglars to go undetected. And even though most homeowners installed alarm systems after previous crime waves, Gilson said many vacationers don't set them.

But even that might not help.

After her first break-in a year ago, Crichton said she had an alarm and bolts put on the front door. That didn't stop burglars from kicking down the door in June.

Crichton worries the increase in thefts will drive away tourists. So do other homeowners.

"I don't want to lose [my] rental-home business," Gilson said. "I know if I can't rent this home, I lose it."


Eloisa Ruano Gonzalez can be reached at egonzalez@orlandosentinel.com or 407-931-5940.
 

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