Twelve thefts of exotic fish and pond equipment have been reported over a three-week period across Hull, East Yorks.
Humberside Police Community Support Officer Sam Gregory said all the evidence suggests the culprits are using the Internet to seek out their targets.
A picture of a kohaku Koi carp in a pond Copyright www.jjphoto.dk
“Google shows what is in your garden and you can see people’s ponds“, Gregory explained.
“One of the properties targeted has an eight foot fence and is set back from the road. The pond is in the corner and can’t be seen. Unless you were standing right next to the wall, you wouldn’t be able to hear the running water.”
In association with one of the thefts, where four small koi carps and some expensive lilies were taken, a neighbour report seeing two young men with a bike with a box on it and a big black net.
“Criminals could use maps, phones and getaway cars but no one would argue that these technologies are responsible for the crime itself, that responsibility lies with the perpetrator”, a Google spokesperson said, adding that Google is just one of several providers of detailed satellite images.
Google is now adding marine parks to their maps, starting with the famous Great Barrier Reef off the coast of Australia. It is now possible to use Google Maps to see islands, reefs, cays and even rocks on the reef, but the future of the map function might be even more exiting since Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority chairman Russel Reichelt has expressed hopes of having current still images of the reef streamed to the map in real time in the near future.