Citations:TWOC


 * 2002, Louise Westmarland, Gender and Policing, Routledge (ISBN 9781135993429):
 * women making arrests for aggravated burglary represent 22 per cent of the total and for aggravated TWOCs, 23 per cent
 * 2005, R. MacDonald, J. Marsh, Disconnected Youth?: Growing up in Britain’s Poor in Neighbourhoods, Springer (ISBN 9780230511750), page 161:
 * Others reported how their cars, or those of other family members, had been broken into (e.g. to allow the theft of car radios), stolen and sometimes found burnt out after TWOCs.
 * 2010, Anthony Bottoms, Julian Roberts, Hearing the Victim: Adversarial Justice, Crime Victims and the State, Routledge (ISBN 9781317436775):
 * Table 5.4 presents data on two different types of vehicle crime, and as for burglaries (Table 5.2) there is an interesting difference in the pattern of results for the two offences. For unlawful takings or &#39;TWOCs&#39;, offender households have a