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Florida home invasion caught on camera; sheriff says intruders left after seeing 3 kids

Florida home invasion caught on camera; sheriff says intruders left after seeing 3 kids
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Florida home invasion caught on camera; sheriff says intruders left after seeing 3 kids
On Saturday, June 3, just after 3 a.m., at a home in the Copper Ridge subdivision in North Lakeland, masked intruders kicked in the door of a home and went inside.“As you can see, they are well garbed up, they had masks on, they had gloves,” said Polk County Sheriff Grady Judd, who is asking for the public’s help to identify the intruders.The sheriff says the intruders entered the home but left without taking anything.“When the burglars that did the home invasion heard the kids screaming and crying and noticed it was kids there, he told the others, ‘Let’s go, it’s kids,’ and they left without taking anything,” Sheriff Judd said.He says at the time of the break-in, there were three 11-year-old children inside the home. At the time, their parents were not present and it took nearly 45 minutes for someone to call 911, but the sheriff says his investigators have no reason to suspect the parents were doing anything wrong.“We just know that normally, there is a targeted house that these folks kick the doors in on, but of course, we didn’t see any evidence of any criminal conduct there,” Judd said.Shane Moore just moved into the neighborhood. He says it’s a nice place to live.“Everybody is friendly here man. We get along, we party on the weekends, we’re out in the street, we play corn hole,” said Moore, who is shocked the home invasion happened near his house.” Especially being new to the neighborhood, not what you think about, it’s not what you want to come in to and hope it doesn’t happen again,” said Moore.Tom Kosturik also lives in the neighborhood and says the thieves were taking a big chance.“There’s probably very few homes that don’t have cameras, and between you and me, many people own guns. Somebody’s got to be out of their mind to break into a home in a neighborhood like this,” said Kosturik.Sheriff Judd says in this case, the homeowners would have been well within their rights to defend themselves.“Well, it’s dangerous for the ones who kicked the doors in. I can tell you, if you kick my door in, in the middle of the night, I will kill you graveyard dead, and the owners of the house would certainly have every right do to that,” said Judd.

On Saturday, June 3, just after 3 a.m., at a home in the Copper Ridge subdivision in North Lakeland, masked intruders kicked in the door of a home and went inside.

“As you can see, they are well garbed up, they had masks on, they had gloves,” said Polk County Sheriff Grady Judd, who is asking for the public’s help to identify the intruders.

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The sheriff says the intruders entered the home but left without taking anything.

“When the burglars that did the home invasion heard the kids screaming and crying and noticed it was kids there, he told the others, ‘Let’s go, it’s kids,’ and they left without taking anything,” Sheriff Judd said.

He says at the time of the break-in, there were three 11-year-old children inside the home. At the time, their parents were not present and it took nearly 45 minutes for someone to call 911, but the sheriff says his investigators have no reason to suspect the parents were doing anything wrong.

“We just know that normally, there is a targeted house that these folks kick the doors in on, but of course, we didn’t see any evidence of any criminal conduct there,” Judd said.

Shane Moore just moved into the neighborhood. He says it’s a nice place to live.

“Everybody is friendly here man. We get along, we party on the weekends, we’re out in the street, we play corn hole,” said Moore, who is shocked the home invasion happened near his house.” Especially being new to the neighborhood, not what you think about, it’s not what you want to come in to and hope it doesn’t happen again,” said Moore.

Tom Kosturik also lives in the neighborhood and says the thieves were taking a big chance.

“There’s probably very few homes that don’t have cameras, and between you and me, many people own guns. Somebody’s got to be out of their mind to break into a home in a neighborhood like this,” said Kosturik.

Sheriff Judd says in this case, the homeowners would have been well within their rights to defend themselves.

“Well, it’s dangerous for the ones who kicked the doors in. I can tell you, if you kick my door in, in the middle of the night, I will kill you graveyard dead, and the owners of the house would certainly have every right do to that,” said Judd.