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The traps and contraptionas you mentioned could end up with you in court for criminal injuries if an intruder was injured.
Serves them right though if you ask me.
Most I have is a standard alarm system and a stripped down webcam inside a garden wall light.
Mack.
HUGE responsibility, though. My sister lives across the street from a woman who imports and sells diamonds; she has a true guard dog and the critter is not a pet. Everything - from walking the dog far away from other people to having visitors over for dinner - needs to be done cautiously when you have a guard dog. Not only because people don't generally understand the difference between working dog vs. pet, but also because apparently the liability of having a trained guard dog (aka a weapon) is enormous.
I am looking for a 100% reliable way to ensure that anyone who uninvited enters my home will be seriously damaged, but not killed.
I don't think this is possible. I tend to think you are joking (but am scared to find out).
If a kid died while snooping around your house - you'd probably be facing some serious problems. A cop or fireman - they'd go after you and try and get you for felony murder or something.
This guy got six months
[saf.org...]
If your state has a law against booby traps - and it is a felony - the felony murder rule could get you into a lot of trouble.
Isn't it worth preventing people from getting in in the first place - versus acid pillows and trap doors?
I can't imagine this is real. Anyone with that much time and money to engineer a "barbwire basement" would do better with some bars on the windows and medeco locks on the doors.
It must be fun having your kids wandering around the house rubbing their eyes in the morning avoiding electric fences, acid pillows and barbed-wire pits. More worrying is the idea that some people probably do take this stuff seriously and their children grow up with this level of paranoia.
I dunno.. there is just nothing in my house that is worth enough to want these sorts of measures around.
Aside from me, of course, and I'm a light sleeper with lockable doors and climb-outable windows.
Oh.. and Brian my pc.. and my cat.. but she's got legs of her own and can take care of herself... so yeah, just me and Brian the Brain. :)
Get some of these [ericsfunnypictures.com].
>>What about the firemen who enter the house trying to save it?
I'm sure they'll do their best [funny-city.com].
I guess I could live with trillianjedi idea; rigg some cs gas granades and buy a few more gasmasks. It will be easiest to use tripwires but it will probably be safer and more efficient to use motion detectors to trigger the granades.
If there is a fire at my house I guess the firemen would be wearing protective equipment, and would therefore not be affected.
Thanks a million trillianjedi!
> Get a really ferocious guard dog.
Everything - ... - needs to be done cautiously when you have a guard dog. Not only because people don't generally understand the difference between working dog vs. pet, ...
Good lord, who trained the beast?! Any properly trained dog should darn well do anything the owner says at the drop of a hat... including (perhaps most importantly) the classic beginning obedience command: Down! Stay!
If a dog can't be trusted, it's not well trained, IMO. With the exception of some very specialized breeds, even a "guard dog" should be able to be ordered "off duty" by its owner, or at least told to go lay down and shut up, working dog or not.
Actually, any dog that barks a lot will do, even a friendly one. Intruders are a lazy lot (otherwise they would have jobs), and will probably just go to the next house if they hear any dog.
Of course, like DigitalGhost said, it doesn't sound like your house is safe for any dog.
Are you actually serious, or is this a foo funnin Friday?