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Ask Slashdot: How To Secure My Life-In-A-Briefcase?

An anonymous reader writes "I used to travel with a book and some clothes in a backpack, and now my entire life fits into my briefcase. I have a laptop, a tablet, and a cell phone with access to all of my documents through Dropbox, and all the books I own are on my kindle. Aside from having about four grand in electronics, the bag has everything of value that I own. If that bag is stolen while I'm traveling, it will be more trouble than if my apartment burns down (while I'm not in it). What can I do to secure my life-in-a-briefcase?"

5 of 241 comments (clear)

  1. Pelican 1490 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    I travel around the world, and this is the best case I have ever used. Well, my Pelican 1514 is a close second. :)

    It is waterproof, you can drop it or impact it and you don't need to worry about it, and it just works.

    You can also lock it, or lock it to something (in your apt when you are away). Don't lock it someplace at an airport and leave...

    I envy you in that you can fit everything in one case, I am trying to get down to one small car load with about 5-6 cases.

  2. Re:Easy solution by Nitewing98 · · Score: 4, Informative

    Kind of hard to get through airport security with a .45 on your person. Just sayin'.

    --

    Nitewing '98

    Everything works...in theory.

  3. PacSafe bag cages by at.drinian · · Score: 4, Informative

    There's a company called PacSafe that makes what are essentially collapsible wire cages you can wrap your bag in, and then chain the bag to something solid, like a drain pipe: http://pacsafe.com/ That being said, I went around the world a couple of times without one of these, and did just fine. They tend to draw attention.

  4. Re:Don't do this! by drkim · · Score: 5, Informative

    Don't put your bag on the belt until the previous person has cleared the detector.

    There are actually teams of two that work this way:

    Bad#1 Walks through detector
    You put your stuff on the belt
    Bad#2 Gets delayed at the detector (Ooops! I forgot those keys)
    Bad#1 Picks up your stuff
    Bad#2 is visually distracting you, goes though the detector again, gets delayed, or finally clears
    Your stuff is long gone, as is Bad#1

  5. Re:helpful suggestion by JWSmythe · · Score: 4, Informative

        Parking lots after hours are a choice with no witnesses.

        If he stops at a store on a regular basis on the way home, that works too. A smash and grab takes seconds, while a trip into any store takes minutes. No one cares about car alarms, you can trigger it and walk away, and no one will notice, as long as you aren't wearing a ski mask and looking totally suspicious. I doubt he carries his gear into every store he goes to.

        Most people's driveways feel safe, but are anything but. In most communities, people are inside, and wouldn't hear a thing. If there is security, their job is to observe, not confront. At best, they'll patrol a specific segment of the community every hour. At worst, once a night.

        His home itself if fair game. A bump key or lockpick gun will get you through virtually any residential doors with minimal hassle. 3am when everyone is sound asleep is the riskiest time. The door can even be locked on the way out to add to the confusion.

        For 4 grand cash (assuming it can all be converted to cash quickly), a stolen car and a staged traffic accident will stop the vehicle and get him out of the car with his doors unlocked.

        You aren't truly safe anywhere. You feel safe. A determined attacker will exploit any time he can.

        The best thing to do is, don't say you're carrying thousands of dollars of gear around. Don't look like you're worth attacking. I frequently travel in jeans and a t-shirt, carrying a ratty backpack. Sometimes it'll have some books. Sometimes it'll have electronics. Sometimes I have enough firepower to pick a fight with a street gang (when going to the shooting range).

        I never look like I have anything worth stealing. When I am dressed to impress, with the necessary accessories, I'm traveling directly from point A to point B, where both locations are relatively secure.

    --
    Serious? Seriousness is well above my pay grade.