Apples and oranges.
The topic is 'unannounced dynamic entries', or whatever term you wish to use. These (hopefully) constitute a tiny percentage of the 'MILLIONS of civilian interactions' you quote.
And there are certainly more than 'a handful of these things a year'.
Thus, the silly percentage you posited is bigtime bogus.
You're done.
And there are certainly more than ‘a handful of these things a year’.
OK. Where’s YOUR numbers on this?
“The topic is ‘unannounced dynamic entries’, or whatever term you wish to use. These (hopefully) constitute a tiny percentage of the ‘MILLIONS of civilian interactions’ you quote.”
Maybe this will help you with your number crunching;
In 2010, there were an estimated 9,082,887 property crime offenses in the Nation. (MY NOTE: these are just the REPORTED ones).
The 2-year trend showed that property crime decreased 2.7 percent in 2010 compared with the 2009 estimate. The 5-year trend, comparing 2010 data with that of 2006, showed a 9.3 percent drop in property crime.
In 2010, the rate of property crime was estimated at 2,941.9 per 100,000 inhabitants, a 3.3 percent decrease when compared with the rate in 2009. The 2010 property crime rate was 12.1 percent lower than the 2006 rate and 19.6 percent below the 2001 rate. (See Tables 1 and 1A.)
Larceny-theft accounted for 68.1 percent of all property crimes in 2010. Burglary accounted for 23.8 percent and motor vehicle theft for 8.1 percent. (Based on Table 1.)
Property crimes in 2010 resulted in losses estimated at 15.7 billion dollars. (Based on Tables 1 and 23.)