9 Must-Know Safety Rules for Realtors
Here are some of the potentially life-saving tips.
Know your prospects. Never meet a
first-time prospect at a property based only on a phone
call. Meet at your office first. Tell the prospect that
it’s company policy to make a copy of a driver’s
identification of all customers. Also, introduce
that person to at least two other people in your office.
Criminals are less likely to take action if they think
they’ll be recognized.
Create a distress code. When you feel
threatened, you can use this seemingly benign verbal
code in a phone conversation to your coworkers, friends,
or family. The code is a tip-off that you’re in danger
and need help. For example, your distress code may be
the phrase “red file.” If you’re in trouble, you would
call your office and say something like “could you see
if there’s a RED FILE on the property?” The person on
the phone would then know to call 911 or take another
action you’ve agreed upon.
Don’t be too flashy. Wear conservative
clothing and avoid ostentatious jewelry that could make
you a target for theft. Real estate professionals often
market themselves with photos, which can be risky, as
perpetrators have been known to scan real estate photos
looking for victims. Make sure your business photos are
professional, not sexy, so that you don’t attract
unwanted attention. Also, don’t reveal too much personal
information in your ads or in conversations with
customers.
Be in the driver’s seat. Always use
your own car when showing a property so you stay in
control. If a client insists on driving, let him take
his own car and follow behind you. Also, remember to
lock the doors whenever entering or leaving your vehicle
to prevent criminals from attacking after you’re in the
car, or waiting for you in the car while you’re running
errands.
Don’t get stranded. Always keep your
car’s gas tank filled above a quarter-tank. Also, keep
the following safety tools in the car: A charged cell
phone, a battery jumper, a spare tire, and a roadside
emergency kit that includes a flashlight and flares.
Carry pepper spray. Have a pepper spray
dispenser easily accessible on your key chain at all
times. Pepper spray is a chemical that causes temporary
pain and even blindness when sprayed on an attacker. It
also can be used against aggressive animals.
Keep an eye on the exit. During home
showings, never walk into a room first. Instead, allow
potential buyers to explore areas of the home on their
own, with you following behind to answer their
questions. Avoid escorting prospects into basements or
other secluded areas, where you can become trapped.
Always position yourself between the customer and the
exit.
Check in often. Let your office and
family know when, where, and with whom your appointments
will be and when you expect to return. Make it your
policy to check in every hour when you’re with clients.
If you don’t call to check in, the office should call
you right away.
Never say you’re alone. If you
encounter an individual while working late at the
office, never indicate to that person that you are by
yourself. Say something like, “My supervisor will be
right with you and should be able to assist you.”
Likewise, if you’re meeting a customer at a home for a
showing, never say anything about the home being
“vacant.” Make it seem as though other people may be
there.
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Tuesday, October 2, 2007
AP
BRUNSWICK, Georgia -- A jury sentenced a man
to death by lethal injection Sunday for the
2003 murders of two real estate agents he
robbed, stripped naked and shot in the head
at their office.
Stacey Ian Humphreys, 34, was convicted
Tuesday by the same jury in the slayings of
33-year-old Cyndi Williams and 21-year-old
Lori Brown. The trial lasted two weeks and
deliberations on the death sentence took
nearly 19 hours.
The victims' families cried and embraced
when a court clerk read the verdict Sunday
morning. Humphreys showed no emotion.
"A terrible crime deserves a terrible
punishment," Brown's father, Wayne Brown
Sr., told reporters outside the courthouse.
Williams' sister, Teri Marks-Brunner,
said the jury's decision would not erase her
family's pain but offered some relief.
"There's still a lot of healing,"
Marks-Brunner said. "In that part of our
lives, there will always be a hole there.
But it's the next step in healing."
Humphreys' attorney, Jimmy Berry, said
his client told him that his attorneys had
done everything they could to spare his
life.
The death sentence will be appealed
automatically.
Prosecutors said Humphreys attacked Brown
and Williams to steal money for a US$565
payment on his sport utility vehicle. A
co-worker found the women's naked bodies
Nov. 3, 2003, in their sales office in the
Atlanta suburb of Powder Springs.
Humphreys told investigators in a
recorded interview after his arrest that he
believed he had killed the women but could
not recall doing it.
Asked why the women were found naked,
Humphreys told police he had read that women
could be controlled by making them undress
during a robbery. He was not charged with
any sex crimes.
The trial was moved more than 300 miles
(480 kilometers) from Cobb County to
Brunswick on the Georgia coast because of
pretrial publicity.
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Texas Murder Raises Concerns For Real Estate Agent Safety
The brutal murder of Sarah Ann Walker in McKinney, Texas
early this month has again spotlighted a perennial topic -
violence against real estate agents and real estate
safety tips.
Ms. Walker was presiding over an open house at a new housing
development when she was stabbed 27 times. A house hunting
couple found her body on the kitchen floor.
Conducting a real estate practice almost by definition puts
agents in potentially hazardous situations. An agent conducting
an open house is often alone and knows nothing about the person
walking in the door. Agents often meet customers for the first
time in front of a vacant house, or drive or ride with them to
an appointment. It is not uncommon for an agent to be alone in
the office late at night, finalizing an offer or catching up on
paperwork, and some agents still go door to door looking for
listings.
There don't appear to be any real solid statistics
on the number of agents who fall victim to murder, rape,
assault, or robbery. One source states that 206 agents were
murdered on the job between 1982 and 2000. This does not even
touch on the number of agents who were the victims of sexual
assault, non-fatal shootings, beatings, and stabbings; robbery,
and car jacking. Misiu Systems, Ltd which provides security
products to the industry lists news articles about 74 incidents
including murders, police alerts to agents, sexual assaults, and
robberies since February, 1997, ten since the first of this
year. Many of the accounts concerned multiple victims.
Among the stories:
St. Petersburg, FL, March 2006. A neatly dressed young
man posing as a relocated Drug Enforcement Administration agent
spent over four hours looking at houses with a real estate agent
before asking to return to one of the first homes he had seen.
There he attacked her, took her car keys and purse while
threatening to kill her with the gun and the 12-inch hunting
knife he had concealed on his person. The agent was hurt but not
seriously.
DeKalb County, GA, May 2006. Within 11 days, three
female real estate agents in DeKalb County reported being robbed
at gunpoint by a man and woman. Police said the incidents
appeared similar because each happened in the evening hours,
involved a female real estate agent and was allegedly committed
by an armed man and woman fitting similar descriptions.
"The perpetrators would contact the realtor, usually by
phone. In one incident, the realtor actually went to the MARTA
station and picked them up, took them to the location, showed
them the home, and as they were concluding their walk-through,
they were robbed," said Officer Davis. In each case the agent
was tied up and her vehicle was stolen.
A month earlier another DeKalb County agent was abducted and
forced to withdraw $1,500 from an ATM machine then taken to a
jewelry store where she used credit cards to purchase a $7,500
Rolex watch for the robber. During the incident he frequently
threatened to shoot her or "dismember" her if she did not
cooperate.
Diamond Bar, CA, November 2005. A newly licensed real
estate agent was shot and critically wounded while canvassing a
neighborhood for clients. The victim had apparently appeared to
be acting suspiciously and a homeowner shot him after he knocked
on his door. Police thought the agent may have been mistaken for
someone the homeowner had had an altercation with earlier in the
week.
Baltimore, MD, July 2004. Maryland State Police warned
realtors about a man who allegedly injured one agent and could
be stalking others.
In the first incident a female agent was assaulted during an
open house by a visitor who looked around the house then picked
up an object and struck the agent on the back of the head.
Police had first viewed it as an isolated incident but other
agents reported a man matching the description had attended open
houses in the area and in one case tried to lure the host agent
into an isolated part of the house.
The agent who was hit was able to fend off her attacker but
police believe it was intended as a sexual assault.
Many real estate office managers routinely discuss
safety practices with their agents but few have any
hard and fast rules and agents themselves say that they often
knowingly take risks because it is the only way they can conduct
business. Local real estate boards conduct occasional safety
courses and some, such as the Kentucky Board of Realtors, have
published booklets on crime prevention for their membership. The
National Board of Realtors® (NAR) has designated the week of
September 10-16, 2006 as the fourth annual REALTOR®
Safety Week, stating that more than 54 percent of all
respondents to a recent survey reported that they had
experienced safety concerns, incidents, or harassing situations
on the job.
Law enforcement officials, real estate boards, real estate
trainers, and others routinely advise agents to observe some
common sense safety precautions.
Realtor Safety Tips:
- Always meet a client for the first time in the office.
Introduce him or her to coworkers and make it clear that
they know you are taking him out of the office. Try to take
separate cars but if that is not possible you will have
slightly more control if you drive. Do not meet a client at
the property, particularly if he is calling on a yard sign.
He will already have had a chance to note if the property is
vacant.
- Get a license plate number and leave it at the front
desk. Just explain that it is office policy; a customer who
means no harm won't mind. You might also leave an itinerary
for your house tour.
- Don't identify a property as vacant to a caller on an ad
or sign.
- When showing property to a stranger, follow rather than
lead him through the house. Don't let him get between you
and the door. At an open house, take up a position as close
to the door as practical.
- Always carry a cell phone where it is easily accessible
(not in the purse you left in the car or stowed in a kitchen
cabinet.) Make sure emergency numbers are programmed into
the speed dial.
- Ask the office manager to control keys to the office and
to place deadbolts on the doors. If you are alone in the
office at night draw the shades and do not admit anyone you
do not know well and trust.
- Go with your gut. If something doesn't feel right, if
anything raises the hair on the back of your neck escape the
situation immediately. You might feel like an idiot but
don't worry about it.
Police have also noted an increase in crimes where a woman
sets up the victim, even for sexual assault. Women agents tend
to be much more trusting of another female and let down their
guard. Until you really know a customer, remain vigilant
regardless of the gender, appearance, dress, or charm. It could
save your life.
Mortgage Daily News
Published 7/26/2006
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