A true story
After a storeroom break-in, police were stumped. Then the building
manager realized the CrossOver lock on the building’s back door held the
secret that could solve the crime. What happened next?
Here’s the whole story:

The scene of the crime. A
CrossOver X30 is
installed.Do you have a true story of
how a CrossOver Lock helped you?
Let us know!
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Standing in the shadows at the back of the old brick building, the man
looked right, then left. There was no one else in the alley; the
darkened parking lot nearby was empty. Not surprising, because it was 3
in the morning and the man—who worked for the building’s cleaning
service—was many hours past his quitting time.
He pulled out his keychain and tapped his iButton to the green light on
the lock on the back door. The lock beeped as it unlocked. He pulled
open the green steel door, stepped into the dark corridor and closed the
door softly behind him.
From a storeroom, he gathered up some welding equipment and carried it
to his truck. Five minutes after he started, he was gone.
The theft was discovered the next day. Police were stumped, because
there was no evidence of a break-in. Then the building manager realized
the CrossOver lock on the back door held the secret that could solve the
crime.
CrossOver locks remember who used the lock and when they used it. It
took just a few moments to download the lock’s usage into the lock
software on her PC, and from there it was obvious: Why would a member of
the cleaning crew enter the building at 3 a.m.?
When confronted with the evidence and asked why he had been in the
building at 3 a.m., the man confessed and returned the stolen items.
The building manager had been testing the lock to see if it fit her
needs. After learning more about the software, she found she could have
avoided the problem by programming the lock to recognize the cleaning
crew’s iButtons only during the hours they were supposed to be in the
building,. If that had been done, the man’s iButton would not have
worked at 3 a.m.
The building manager was impressed with the locks, and installed them on
each tenant’s office in the building.
They’ve provided even more benefits than she expected:
- Before the CrossOver locks, when a tenant lost a key, she would call
the local locksmith, wait a week or more to get the lock re-keyed and be
charged $90 to $100 for the privilege. Now, with the CrossOver locks,
she charges the tenant $5 to delete the lost iButton from the lock—a
process that takes less than 5 minutes and renders the iButton
useless—and then sells the tenant a replacement iButton. If the lost
iButton is found, it can be reused.
- One tenant likes to have a monthly report on who used their office
lock and when, just as a double-check on his employees. For a few
dollars a month, she downloads the lock’s usage from the lock into her
PC and sends the tenant an Excel spreadsheet listing who used the lock
and when.
Learn more about our CrossOver Locks:
The smart, simple and secure choice for your building.
Click here.
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