Your Wireless Security System Has a Blind Spot.
These Crews Already Know About It.
Just before 1 a.m. Thursday, two men walked to the back of a mansion in Porter Ranch and smashed through a sliding glass door.
They were on camera the moment they did it. They knew they were on camera. They didn’t care, because they had already planned the next step.
They pulled out a Wi-Fi jammer, activated it, and the home’s security system went dark.
The cameras stopped transmitting. The wireless alarm sensors dropped offline. And two men were standing at a broken rear door on a property that had just been blinded from the outside.
The home belongs to influencer Raven Tracy McEachin, where she lives with Christian “King” Combs. Neither was home at the time. An employee inside the house heard the glass break, recognized it for what it was, and called LAPD.
Neighbors heard it too and initially thought it was a gunshot. Officers arrived, searched the backyard, and took a report. The suspects fled before police got there. No arrests. Nothing stolen.
That is the news version, which is not what you need.
What you need is this: the sliding glass door and the Wi-Fi jammer appearing together in the same entry attempt is a methodology.
LAPD has flagged this combination repeatedly in recent high-end burglary cases across Los Angeles.
These two tactics work together as a sequence, and if your home security setup runs on Wi-Fi, you are vulnerable to the same approach regardless of what neighborhood you live in.
Here is how it works and what to do about it.


