Show me data to back up the assumption that having lights on could/would have prevented a robbery.
I offer that Most burglaries (65.8 percent) occurred at residences; most residential burglaries (62.0 percent) occurred during the daytime. (source
http://crime.about.com/od/stats/a/ucr_burglary.htm) I offer that light helps burgularies and robberies to a great extent. I offer that my neighbor (since you like personal experiences of no statistical value) has been robbed three times in the last ten years. Two of those WERE night-time burgularies. In the last incident they broke into a locked tool trailer under his house (we live in stilt houses) to steal some really crappy Black and Decker Pekker Wrecker cheap-butt tools. We have a 8' wooden fence between out houses so that I can block the freaking laser light show he has going. It is dark under my house. I have never been robbed. I have a full woodshop/boatshop of tools under the house, no doors, no walls, no locks...and all of it Porter Cable, Hitachi, Delta...good stuff. Tons of hand-tools in the open bed of a little pickup under the house as well. I don't lock my truck doors even. We have no lights on at night, and we are shaded (under the house, but my bedroom window is the target of one of his freaking spotlights) from his 10,000000000 candlepower set-up.
Firelight keeps away the bears and the night-fears, not the real monsters.
Ever try to be quiet while stumbling around in someones totally dark toolshed? Which attracts more attention; a flashlight or someone standing in a streetlight? I call bull****.
Aside from that, my statement that excessive stupid firing up of the skyline is an idiot waste on the order of SUV's
Upshot: if you want surveilled security, you need a dog or a dark environment outfitted with the currently inexpensive motion detectors (wire em to lights and a warning beeper inside if you like), thermal cameras or light amplifying cameras.