Across: |
2. | The officer said he couldn't ___ the man until he committed a crime. |
5. | She looked out her window and saw a suspicious-looking man walking past her ___. |
6. | She looked in her ___ view mirror and saw the man walk up a driveway. |
9. | She looked in her rear view ___ to see what the man was doing. |
11. | The police depend on the ___s in each neighborhood to report crime and criminals. |
14. | The man is a ___! He's just looking for something to steal. |
15. | She thought that he tested the door ___ to see if the car was locked. |
17. | It's not against the ___ to look like a criminal; it's against the ___ to act like a criminal. |
18. | We have a ___, quiet neighborhood and we don't want people like him walking around in it. |
19. | You can't ___ a book by its cover, and you can't ___ a man by his clothes. |
21. | She was watching him in the rear view mirror, when he ___ disappeared. Where did he go, she wondered. |
23. | She ___d that he had walked up the driveway to see if the car was unlocked so that he could steal something from it. |
24. | Don't call me if you think he's going to steal something. Call me if you ___ see him stealing something. |
26. | She ___d the man to the police officer; he knew who the man was. |
27. | Don't judge a book by its ___; don't judge someone by their looks or their clothes. |
28. | She drove down the street to the ___ and then she turned around. |