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By: 24-7 Press Release
February 12, 2026

Curated TLDR

Keith Fowler Shares His Outlook on Personal and Community Security for the Year Ahead

ORANGE COUNTY, CA, February 12, 2026 /24-7PressRelease/ -- Keith Fowler, founder and operator of Lion Shield Protection, has released his personal outlook on what individuals should expect in the coming year across personal, residential, and community security. Drawing from day-to-day field operations and direct client feedback, Fowler outlines what has changed, what people are getting wrong, what will likely get harder, and what will still work if done consistently.

"Most incidents I see are not complex," Fowler says. "They come from routine, distraction, and overconfidence. That hasn't changed. What's changed is how fast small mistakes turn into real problems."

What Changed Recently
Fowler notes a sharp increase in opportunistic incidents tied to routine behaviour. People are moving faster, multitasking more, and paying less attention to their surroundings.

Recent data supports this shift:
41% of home break-ins occur without forced entry, often due to unlocked doors or poor routines.

27% of theft incidents involve vehicles, frequently from items left in plain sight.

Over 60% of people admit they check their phones while entering or exiting their homes.

Nearly 70% of adults still have no basic emergency plan.

"People assume risk looks dramatic," Fowler says. "In reality, it looks quiet and fast."

What People Are Getting Wrong
According to Fowler, many individuals rely on tools while ignoring habits.

"I see people trust alarms, cameras, or apps, but they skip the basics," he says. "No system fixes poor awareness."

Common errors include predictable routines, unlocked vehicles "just for a minute," and ignoring subtle warning signs. Fowler adds that people often mistake familiarity for safety.

"Being comfortable in a place doesn't make it safe," he says. "It just lowers your guard."

What Is Likely to Get Harder
Fowler expects three pressures to increase over the next year: response times, personal responsibility, and accountability.

Key indicators include:
Police response times have increased by 15–20% in many urban areas.

Property crime rates rose in over half of U.S. counties last year.

Emergency services are increasingly stretched during peak hours.

"Help may take longer," Fowler says. "That means individuals need to be more self-aware and prepared."

What Will Still Work
Despite these pressures, Fowler is clear about what continues to work.

"Consistency wins," he says. "Simple habits done every day beat complex plans that never get used."

He points to basics: locking doors every time, clearing vehicles, pausing before entry, scanning environments, and keeping emergency contacts accessible.

"I've watched people avoid problems because they paused for three seconds," Fowler says. "That pause matters."

Three Scenarios for the Year Ahead
Optimistic Scenario
Conditions stabilise. Communities improve coordination. Individuals adopt better habits.

Best actions:
Establish a simple daily safety checklist.
Review home and vehicle routines weekly.
Share emergency plans with family members.

Realistic Scenario
Incidents remain steady. Response times stay stretched. Personal responsibility increases.

Best actions:
Change routines regularly.
Reduce distractions during transitions.
Keep valuables out of sight and plans written down.

Cautious Scenario
Incidents increase locally. Response delays grow. Small mistakes carry higher cost.

Best actions:
Heighten situational awareness in public spaces.
Add redundancy to emergency contacts and meeting points.
Audit habits monthly and correct gaps immediately.

"None of these steps require fear," Fowler says. "They require attention."

Call to Action
Fowler urges readers to choose the scenario that best fits their environment and act now.

"Pick your scenario," he says. "Then follow the steps. Don't wait for a close call to get serious."

Start today by identifying three daily habits to improve. Apply them consistently for two weeks. Review and adjust.

"Safety doesn't come from luck," Fowler adds. "It comes from habits."

About Keith Fowler
Keith Fowler is an entrepreneur and the founder of Lion Shield Protection, based in Orange County, California. He leads operations across multiple Southern California counties and is known for his hands-on, standards-driven approach to security. Fowler focuses on readiness, awareness, and consistency, and supports several community and health-related causes.

Contact: keithfowler@emaildn.com

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