buggery: (Default)
buggery ([personal profile] buggery) wrote2004-12-03 07:30 pm

Well, don't I feel VIOLATED.

So my apartment was broken into today.

I know who did it, or at least who enabled it; whoever it was used a key, and locked the apartment again when they left, and the lock's a deadbolt. Whoever used the key works for my building's management company.

New faucet attachments had been installed throughout the building a couple of weeks ago that have been making the hot water fail to work properly, and they'd told us earlier in the week that they would be coming to remove them soon, but not specified when. The new attachments are now gone from my kitchen and bathroom spigots, which, aside from how freaked out my cat was when I arrived home an hour and a half ago, is how I know someone was in here.

As far as I know, nothing was taken, nobody appears to have rifled through my underwear drawer, and I'm just hoping there's not a new micro-cam in my bedroom or bathroom.

Nevertheless.

In my building, as, I should think, in most apartments, residents specify in writing whether management is allowed to enter the apartment when they are not home. Management can enter in an emergency in any case, but many people understandably don't want to leave the door open (so to speak) to have someone enter their home without their prior knowledge or consent.

I've always indicated that I do not want management to enter my apartment when I am not present. I just discussed this with someone at the main office for our management company on Monday -- they'd been wanting to do a routine inspection, and, partly because I didn't know they were trying to do so, they'd had bad luck just coming by and knocking on the door to find I wasn't home. They're perfectly well aware that they don't have permission to enter the apartment.

Before I left this afternoon -- to go out to lunch and do some errands -- I stopped by the on-site manager's office downstairs to give her my schedule for next week, so that they could arrange a time when both management and I were available. The building's superintendent, who usually effects any needed repairs as well as accompanying the on-site manager to inspections, was in the manager's office. Neither of them mentioned that there were any plans to remove the attachments today, nor asked if I was going to be around. Yet still, mere hours later, either they or other employees of the building's management company illegally entered my apartment.

Clearly, the malfunctioning attachments did not constitute an emergency situation; if they had, management would have gone into apartments to remove them earlier in the week.

I'll be filing a police report about the break-in tomorrow. As anyone who's ever had a break-in knows, you don't always notice immediately everything (or anything) that's been taken, and there's also the possibility of surveillance equipment being placed illegally in one's home -- we've all heard those horror stories about handymen putting recording equipment in renters' apartments in order to have a free show. Having a timely police report on file is, if not strictly necessary, certainly helpful in pursuing further legal action if it should turn out that any crime beyond the simple trespass was committed.

Perhaps most important of all, pursuing legal action should hopefully reinforce the importance to my building's management of respecting their residents' privacy rights.

Edited to add: I've now made my report to the local police about the break-in. Thanks to everyone who's expressed sympathy and/or righteous indignation on my behalf. Having my feelings validated has been really important. ::hugs you all::
gloss: woman in front of birch tree looking to the right (Default)

[personal profile] gloss 2004-12-03 05:27 pm (UTC)(link)
*Damn*. I was broken into/burgled about six years ago, and that feeling of having one's space violated just doesn't go away any time soon - somehow, knowing it was your management just makes it worse. I'm so sorry.
ext_6171: Nightwing pressing the back of a hand melodramatically to his brow (actually unconscious; cropped comic panel) (clearly!)

[identity profile] buggery.livejournal.com 2004-12-04 05:10 am (UTC)(link)
I had an actual home invasion 8 1/2 years ago -- a former tenant who'd been evicted from the apartment had rigged one of the windows so he could get back in, and he came in and burgled us while we were sleeping twice before we figured out how he was getting past the locked door and nailed the window shut, and so the third time he reached in through a broken-out pane in the front door to unlock it and, since we were awake and realised there was somebody downstairs, came up after us and robbed us at gunpoint. He got caught and went to jail, but it's no coincidence that every apartment I've lived in since has had a secured front entrance before you got anywhere near my own door. I had not missed this feeling of not being secure in my home at ALL.

[identity profile] jamjar.livejournal.com 2004-12-03 06:08 pm (UTC)(link)
That's really off-key. It sounds like you're doing the right thing about it.

Sympathies and hugs.
ext_6171: Nightwing pressing the back of a hand melodramatically to his brow (actually unconscious; cropped comic panel) (hold me Flash/Green Lantern (Justice Lea)

[identity profile] buggery.livejournal.com 2004-12-04 05:12 am (UTC)(link)
Thanks. The hugs aren't just appreciated -- they're needed.

Hopefully the report-filing will go well.

[identity profile] sharpest_rose.livejournal.com 2004-12-03 06:24 pm (UTC)(link)
That is completely and utterly not cool. I hope that there's some serious fallout for those involved in violating your space like that.
ext_6171: Nightwing pressing the back of a hand melodramatically to his brow (actually unconscious; cropped comic panel) (I Love My Dead Gay Robin (Jason))

[identity profile] buggery.livejournal.com 2004-12-04 05:16 am (UTC)(link)
I'm not sure whether whatever crime this was -- technically speaking, trespassing or breaking-and-entering or what -- is the sort where I choose whether to press charges or the district attorney's office makes that call. I don't know that I would go so far as to press charges, but I certainly want them to get a stern reminder of the legal consequences of fucking with their residents.

[identity profile] skalja.livejournal.com 2004-12-03 10:11 pm (UTC)(link)
*hugs*
ext_6171: Nightwing pressing the back of a hand melodramatically to his brow (actually unconscious; cropped comic panel) (Default)

[identity profile] buggery.livejournal.com 2004-12-04 05:16 am (UTC)(link)
::clings::

[identity profile] glockgal.livejournal.com 2004-12-03 10:57 pm (UTC)(link)
That's sick. When people break into my car I feel my privacy violated, I can't imagine what it must be like ofr a brak into your home. *snuggles* Gah, just. Gah.
ext_6171: Nightwing pressing the back of a hand melodramatically to his brow (actually unconscious; cropped comic panel) (Nightwing (by www.theglockdraws.com))

[identity profile] buggery.livejournal.com 2004-12-04 05:21 am (UTC)(link)
There's the sense of violation, yes, but worse is the nagging fear that, well, they've done it once, what's really going to stop them from doing it again? As a matter of fact, I woke up a little after 4 this morning from a nightmare in which they were continuing to do it, and getting worse -- actually going through my stuff, and saying I had no rights, and stuff -- and I had to lay there for a good ten minutes convincing myself that the things that had only happened in the dream HAD only happened in a dream, and weren't real.

::is snuggled:: Gah indeed.

[identity profile] fox1013.livejournal.com 2004-12-04 04:32 am (UTC)(link)
Gah, that's CREEPY.

*hugs the you*
ext_6171: Nightwing pressing the back of a hand melodramatically to his brow (actually unconscious; cropped comic panel) (All Those Other Fandoms)

[identity profile] buggery.livejournal.com 2004-12-04 05:22 am (UTC)(link)
YES IT IS.

::hugs on a Fox::

[identity profile] suzycat.livejournal.com 2004-12-04 05:34 pm (UTC)(link)
Shit!

*makes noises of sympathy*
ext_6171: Nightwing pressing the back of a hand melodramatically to his brow (actually unconscious; cropped comic panel) (the Jack)

[identity profile] buggery.livejournal.com 2004-12-05 05:30 am (UTC)(link)
Indeed. Thanks for the commiseration.

[identity profile] spykeraven.livejournal.com 2004-12-05 03:01 am (UTC)(link)
My deepest sympathies. One of the most difficult battles I fought with my landlady was whether or not she should have a key to the locks I installed on the door. In the end she kindly agreed not to, and I'm glad because, yeurgh, the thought of anyone looking through my things on a whim makes me feel very ugly.

Am sending good vibes your way and hoping the police report does indeed make a difference.
ext_6171: Nightwing pressing the back of a hand melodramatically to his brow (actually unconscious; cropped comic panel) (supergay apollo/midnighter I wouldn't da)

[identity profile] buggery.livejournal.com 2004-12-05 05:35 am (UTC)(link)
Well, it's not at all a bad idea for somebody to have keys to all your locks, in case of an emergency. But there's a difference between having and using. In my building, there are 150 apartments, and maintenance and management have master keys that open both the front and rear entrances and residents' actual apartments. Because the apartment doors are steel, it would be very difficult for a resident to install an additional lock (and we're forbidden in our leases from doing so anyway). We're even discouraged from having door-chains or push-bars inside the apartment, though a previous tenant had installed one in my apartment and management didn't remove it before I moved in. Things being as they are, though, I'm a lot less comfortable with how many people have access to those master keys than I used to be.