The numbers are simple, obvious and unsurprising. Police Chief Greg Suhr says
that a monthlong survey of property crimes in the Tenderloin showed that 59
percent involved some sort of mobile device - the majority of which were
GT-I9300
cell phones."And I can say routinely, in all areas, over 50 percent
of our property crime is mobile devices," Suhr said.
No kidding. On the
bus, in the street and even in schools, cell phone theft has become the most
common crime of opportunity across the country. If only something could be
done.Something can."I've been shouting it from the highest mountains," Suhr
said. "What we need is a national registry by the cell phone providers so that
when your phone is stolen you can immediately 'brick it' and make it
useless."
There have been other calls for this kind of action. Carriers
are supposed to be able to put the disabling feature into use. But those who
have bricking capability haven't made it clear to customers, and Suhr says
others are stalling.GFaf4cgfg
"They say it is too complicated," he says.
"But they say they can track GT-I9500
phones and they want us to track them, arrest thieves and put them
in jail, when the same software could be used to brick the phone."It seems so
simple - the bricking technology works in Australia - that there's really only
one cynical explanation why it isn't widespread. Carriers are making millions on
replacement phones.
A ban on handheld cellphone use while driving across
the state was approved by the House on Tuesday.The use of hands-free phones in
addition to one-touch dialing while driving still would be permitted.About 76
Illinois communities already have some restrictions on the use of handheld
cellphones while driving. Backers of the measure said it would provide
uniformity for top 10 cell
phones cellphone users who now may not know where they could be
ticketed.
Talking on a cellphone while driving has cost a Christchurch
motorist $160 and 40 demerit points after he was picked up twice in a police
sting.Police ticketed 46 drivers in just two hours yesterday in an operation
aimed at checking seatbelt use and cracking down on drivers using
cellphones.
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