A few years ago a single young man working by himself tried something similar with me, although in his case he claimed to be from Verizon (he had a clipboard with a photocopied Verizon logo taped to it) and wanted to sign me up for some discounted rate. It didn't ring true to me, because, obviously, wouldn't Verizon just call me? But I did actually open to door and talk to him on my porch and he didn't try anythng untoward, and left politely when I told him I wasn't interested. I always wondered what exactly his angle was -- I sort of thought that maybe it was an identity theft scam trying to get my signature.
jf On Apr 20, 2011, at 12:02 AM, Stephen J Gewirtz wrote: > A little before 6 p.m. this evening, my doorbell rang. I opened the inner > door but not the outer security door which can only be opened with a key. On > my porch were a couple, a black male and a white female, college age or more > likely a little bit older. They said that they had the wrong person. > > A few minutes later, I opened the inner door again. The couple were still > there, and the man asked me to open the outer security door. I refused. He > then tried to sell me on saving money by switching to a guaranteed fixed > electric rate instead of paying BGE. I told him that I was not interested, > even though he persisted until I ended the conversation. He was carrying a > notebook. The woman basically was silent. > > Something did not add up. How can they have the wrong person and then try to > sell me something? And why were they still there? Anyway, I reported it to > 911, to a JHU cop who was parked across the street a few minutes later, and > to Northern District police who came moments later in response to my 911 > call. They said that they would be looking for the couple. I do not know > whether, if I had opened my security door, the couple would have rushed in to > grab something in my house or worse. I have seen a report that in a nearby > neighborhood, people have rung doorbells and asked for someone who does not > exist on that block. When they have found a house where nobody is home, they > have broken in. > > I write all this to urge that everyone be very careful about opening a door > to a stranger. And if things really do not add up but look suspicious, call > 911. What I encountered this evening may be legitimate, but my guess is that > it is not. And if it is part of a knock, run in and grab something, and run > scheme or some other scheme, the police will definitely appreciate your > giving them a heads up on what is happening. After all, the cops cannot be > everywhere, so we have to be additional eyes and ears for them. > > Northern District does an excellent job, but we need to give them all the > help we can. > > Steve > > > _______________________________________________ > Chat mailing list > Chat@charlesvillage.info > http://charlesvillage.info/mailman/listinfo/chat_charlesvillage.info > archive: http://www.mail-archive.com/chat@charlesvillage.info/ _______________________________________________ Chat mailing list Chat@charlesvillage.info http://charlesvillage.info/mailman/listinfo/chat_charlesvillage.info archive: http://www.mail-archive.com/chat@charlesvillage.info/