In 2018, a Layton, Utah family’s baby camera captured a burglar entering their home through an unlocked sliding door at 3:40 AM — while a mother and infant slept feet away. The footage went viral and helped police identify the suspect. But the camera didn’t prevent the break-in or alert anyone in real time. This case — and thousands like it — shows exactly why cameras alone aren’t enough.
What the Layton Case Teaches About Home Security
| Factor | What Happened | What Should Have Happened |
|---|---|---|
| Entry point | Unlocked sliding door | Door sensor triggers alarm instantly |
| Detection | Baby camera recorded — no alert | Monitored camera + alarm alerts family + police |
| Response time | Discovered hours later reviewing footage | Siren + phone alert within seconds |
| Prevention | None — intruder entered freely | Siren scares intruder; monitoring dispatches police |
| Evidence | ✅ Video footage helped ID suspect | ✅ Plus cloud backup, timestamped alerts |
The baby camera worked as evidence — but a complete security system would have prevented the intruder from ever reaching the bedroom.
Cameras vs. Security Systems: The Critical Difference
| Capability | Camera Only | Security System |
|---|---|---|
| Records break-in | ✅ | ✅ |
| Sounds alarm/siren | ❌ | ✅ (104+ dB) |
| Alerts your phone instantly | ⚠️ (motion alert, often delayed) | ✅ (immediate push + call) |
| Calls police automatically | ❌ | ✅ (with monitoring) |
| Detects entry before intruder is inside | ❌ | ✅ (door/window sensors) |
| Works during Wi-Fi outage | ❌ (most cameras) | ✅ (cellular backup) |
| Deters before break-in | ⚠️ (visible camera) | ✅ (yard signs, sensors, siren) |
| Auto-arms when you leave | ❌ | ✅ (geofencing) |
| Monitors smoke/CO/water | ❌ | ✅ |
| Crash & smash protection | ❌ | ✅ (cloud-based) |
Key insight: Cameras are evidence tools. Security systems are prevention tools. The best protection uses both — cameras integrated into a monitored system.
5 Lessons Every Family Should Take From This Case
1. Lock Every Entry Point — Every Night
| Entry Point | % of Break-ins (FBI) | Best Protection | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| Front door | 34% | Grade 1 deadbolt + door sensor | $60–$250 |
| Back/side door | 22% | Deadbolt + door sensor + camera | $80–$300 |
| First-floor windows | 23% | Window sensors + security film | $25–$200 |
| Sliding glass door | ~8% | Sliding door bar + sensor + camera | $30–$150 |
| Garage | 9% | Smart garage + tilt sensor | $30–$130 |
The Layton intruder walked through an unlocked sliding door. A $15 sliding door bar and a $15 door sensor would have changed the entire outcome.
2. Cameras Without Monitoring Are Just Recorders
A baby camera, nanny cam, or standalone Wi-Fi camera will record footage — but it won’t wake you up, call the police, or trigger a siren. During sleep (when 60% of occupied-home burglaries happen), you need active alerts, not passive recording.
Security systems with professional monitoring (starting at $6/month with Abode) ensure someone is watching 24/7 — even when you’re asleep.
3. Every Second Counts
| Timeline | Camera Only | Monitored Security System |
|---|---|---|
| 0 seconds | — | Door sensor triggers |
| 1–3 seconds | Motion detected (maybe) | Siren sounds (104 dB) |
| 3–10 seconds | Cloud upload begins | Phone alert + monitoring center notified |
| 10–30 seconds | You might get a phone notification | Monitoring center calls you |
| 30–60 seconds | — | Police dispatched if no response |
| 8–12 minutes | — | Average police arrival |
| Hours later | You discover footage | Intruder already gone or arrested |
4. Children’s Rooms Need Special Attention
| Protection Layer | Product | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| Door sensor on child’s room | Abode Mini sensor | Alerts if door opens while system armed |
| Motion sensor in hallway | PIR sensor | Catches movement toward bedrooms |
| Camera in nursery | Abode Cam 2 ($35) | Visual verification + 2-way audio |
| Glass break sensor | Abode glass break ($35) | Covers multiple windows in one room |
| Window locks + sensor | Contact sensor | Prevents and detects window entry |
5. A Complete System Costs Less Than You Think
| Component | Abode Cost | Ring Cost | SimpliSafe Cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| Starter kit (hub + sensors) | $199 | $199 | $199 |
| Indoor camera | $35 | $59 | $99 |
| Extra door sensors (×3) | $45 | $60 | $45 |
| Glass break sensor | $35 | $40 | $35 |
| Monthly monitoring | $6–$20/mo | $10–$20/mo | $18–$28/mo |
| Total Year 1 | $386–$554 | $478–$598 | $594–$714 |
For about $1/day, you get a fully monitored system that prevents break-ins — not just records them. See current Abode pricing →
Best Security Systems for Families (2026)
| System | Best For | Starting Price | Monthly | Key Family Feature |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Abode | Smart home families | $199 | $0–$20 | HomeKit, geofencing, $35 cameras |
| Ring | Camera-first families | $199 | $10–$20 | Neighbors app, doorbell cameras |
| SimpliSafe | Simple setup | $199 | $0–$28 | Live Guard video verification |
Frequently Asked Questions
Can a baby camera replace a security system?
No. Baby cameras record video but don’t trigger sirens, alert monitoring centers, or call police. They’re useful as one layer of protection but can’t replace door/window sensors, professional monitoring, and audible alarms. Consider integrating your camera into a system like Abode for complete protection.
What’s the cheapest way to protect my family while sleeping?
At minimum: deadbolts on all exterior doors ($20–$60 each), a sliding door bar ($15), and door/window sensors connected to a monitored system ($199 starter kit + $6/mo with Abode). Total: under $300 upfront + $72/year. See our cheap alternatives guide for more budget options.
How do I protect sliding glass doors?
Three layers: (1) sliding door security bar in the track ($15), (2) auxiliary foot lock ($10), (3) door contact sensor on your security system. For extra protection, apply security window film to the glass and add an outdoor camera covering the door.
Do burglars target homes with children?
Burglars generally avoid occupied homes — but 28% of burglaries happen while someone is home (BJS data). They’re looking for easy targets regardless of occupants. Children’s presence actually makes security more important, not less, since kids can’t defend themselves or call for help.
Should I put cameras in my kids’ rooms?
For infants and toddlers, a nursery camera is standard and recommended. For older children, a camera in the hallway outside their room is a better balance of safety and privacy. Pair with door sensors on their room and window sensors — these detect entry without video monitoring. See our baby monitor guide.
What should I do if I hear an intruder while my family is sleeping?
Don’t confront them. Lock your bedroom door, call 911, and shelter in place with your family. If you have a monitored security system, the siren and dispatch are already handling it. Read our full home invasion prevention guide for detailed protocols.

Growing up with Law and Order and CSI shows taught Isabelle Landau one thing: if people back then had high-quality home security systems, those series would have been way shorter. In our modern world, technology helps us keep burglars away easily, and this is what Izzy studies and writes about: alarm systems, home security, protection systems, and more.

Tiffany says
I had never thought about it his way. I have been trying to decide if an alarm system is right for our home. I’m now definitely thinking so.