Homeowner's ingenious way to keep homeless people away from his house

By Daily Mail (U.S.) | Created at 2024-09-25 18:50:49 | Updated at 2024-10-02 06:29:30 6 days ago
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By Rachel Bowman For Dailymail.Com

Published: 17:49 BST, 25 September 2024 | Updated: 19:35 BST, 25 September 2024

A fed-up California homeowner developed a 'diversion security' device to prevent homeless people from camping out in his building's carports.

Santa Monica resident Stephen McMahon, 76, invented the Blue Chirper motion-activated device that emits blue strobe lights and a cricket noise to dissuade homeless people from getting comfortable.

Security footage has captured the device successfully scaring off people who have tried to sleep in the carports when alarm system starts going off.

'I call it diversion security, that is we're diverting them away from our 20-block radius somewhere else,' McMahon told KTLA.

Santa Monica resident Stephen McMahon (pictured) invented a device that emits blue strobe lights and a cricket noise to prevent homeless people from camping out

Security footage has captured the device successful scaring off people from his carport

McMahon said he has grown frustrated with the number of homeless people taking shelter in his carport.

He created the device after someone stole over $20,000 worth of items from locked storage in his building's garage, according to the Santa Monica Daily Press.

'I've lived here for over 30 years, and I've seen this neighborhood, which was just paradise, it was beautiful, deteriorate over the last five to six years,' he said. 

'I want to push these people out of here and bring Santa Monica back to the way it was.' 

The Greater Los Angeles Homeless Count showed 774 people experiencing homelessness in Santa Monica in January. It said that 479 lived outdoors.

Blue light prevents people from falling asleep because it tricks the brain into thinking it is daytime, according to Harvard Health.

The handmade device is called the Blue Chirper

McMahon's neighbors have purchased their own Blue Chirpers from him and installed them in their carports (pictured)

Cameras set up on McMahon's community carports have capture several instances of peopling appearing to prepare to sleep or do drugs. The motion activated sensors then go off and they end up leaving.

McMahon said he has consulted a lawyer to make sure his device is legal to use. Many of his neighbors, including local business, have inquired about getting a device of their own. 

'Look, as long as it's a sound you hear in nature and it's not louder than an actual cricket, you're going to be fine,' he said. 'Nobody can complain about it.' 

Neighbors said they feel safer in their community now that they have an effective way to keep their cars safe.

'It has been nothing less than a total reinvention of our life in that building by doing something as simple as being able to park and being able to go out to our car without fear,' neighbor Cory Greenwell told KCAL.

McMahon said  demand has been increasing near his home (pictured) because neighboring Reed Park is part of the county's needle distribution program and drug use is increasing

Blue light prevents people from falling asleep because it tricks the brain into thinking it is daytime

McMahon is currently selling the devices for around $500 a piece, but he hopes to lower the cost as demand goes up.

He told the Santa Monica Daily Press that demand has been increasing because nearby Reed Park is part of the county's needle distribution program and drug use is increasing.

'I can't make them quick enough,' he said. 'My wife and I are going on holiday next week and I've got this landlord who desperately wants four of them.'

'Otherwise she says that her tenants will move out, it’s got that bad. [The landlord] was in tears. It would normally take me a couple of months to build four, but she was practically begging me.'

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