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Question:

Isn't carbon monoxide heavier than air? If so shouldn't CO detectors be put at floor level?

if CO is heavier than air, then a room “fills-up” from the floor upward and the earliest detection would be a low wall mounted detector

Answer:

Some insurance policies have exclusions for damage caused by police activity. Others may also exclude arson. Read your policy exclusions carefully or contact your insurance broker if you have one to make sure. If the police admit to intentionally burning a house down for whatever reason, they would generally be liable to compensate the homeowner. If they don't, the homeowner can still sue the city/county to recover their damages in court, but they may need to prove the police were negligent in setting the fire. PS I see someone else mentioned a Criminal Act Exclusion. That only applies to criminal or negligent acts committed by the homeowner, and applies toward the liability portion of the policy. A policy may exclude intentional property damage caused by a third party (vandalism or malicious mischief), but that is a separate clause.
I'd be dubious of the value of a $7 alarm system! What is the use of remote start? What if the bike is in gear?..It will ride off its sidestand! If one of the alarm functions is to cut the ignition, then yes, a malfunction could do this while you're riding. Wheelies would not set off the alarm: The alarm is OFF when you're riding. The reliability of an alarm depends mostly on the skill of the installer.
That's exactly the reason! I've been a 'heel' fan for so many years already, that all a wrestler has to do is turn 'face', and right away I have NO respect for them.

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