Pubdate: Wed, 14 Mar 2007
Source: Los Angeles Times (CA)
Copyright: 2007 Los Angeles Times
Contact:  http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/front/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/248
Author: David Kelly
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine)

BUILDING SITES LEAVE COPPER THIEVES WELL-CONNECTED

Construction boom makes the Inland Empire more vulnerable to efforts 
by desperate crooks -- authorities say they're meth users -- 
stripping wire from phone cables, windmills and even hospitals and schools

Fueled by methamphetamine and working like termites, they have 
blacked out entire neighborhoods, stripped building sites and reduced 
telephone poles to splintered wood.

Whether at a school, business or hospital, the thieves' quarry is 
always the same: copper.

Over the last few months, copper-wire thefts have skyrocketed 
statewide and across the nation. Although copper has long been a 
target of those desperate for quick cash, the price of the metal -- 
which has climbed as high as $4 a pound -- and plentiful construction 
sites in growth areas such as the Inland Empire are driving the 
current crime wave. As of Tuesday, copper was selling at about $2.82 a pound.

"In two months' time, we lost $25,000 worth of wire from the land we 
own in Fontana," said Michael Mendonca, who runs a recycling center. 
"We had people coming in every night ripping out wire. I would put 
chains on the gate, and they would cut through them. They didn't care 
what damage they caused; they just wanted enough for their next fix."

Thieves have shown remarkable tenacity digging up buried phone 
cables, stripping power-generating windmills of wire and making off 
with 1,000-pound spools of copper.

Police say they burn off the insulation and take it to recycling 
plants, where they are paid cash. Most of the metal is shipped to 
recyclers in Los Angeles, and within 24 hours, authorities say, it's 
bound for China, which, like India, has an enormous appetite for 
copper to wire its rapidly developing economy.

Riverside Police Det. Charles Payne said the thefts represented a 
serious public safety issue. Hospitals are affected when phone lines 
go down. Burglar alarms don't work, and 911 calls can't be made, he said.

"Any time you have someone messing with the power grid, it's 
dangerous," he said. "This is a very large problem, and it's growing."

Riverside County Sheriff Bob Doyle has met with AT&T and Verizon 
executives to discuss the problem.

"The thieves are getting more sophisticated," said Sgt. Dennis 
Gutierrez, a spokesman for the Riverside County Sheriff's Department. 
"We had some come out from Walnut to strip wire from windmills in the 
desert. They are driving around in white vans so people think they 
are workers."

Gutierrez said telephone poles were being cut down with chain saws 
and wire stolen.

"The one common denominator we have noticed is that they are meth 
users," he said investigators had concluded. "They are awake at all 
times, walking around like zombies."

Similar robberies of copper have occurred nationwide. In Minnesota, 
22,000 pounds of copper was stolen in one night recently. Last month, 
a thief in Irvine ripped out $20,000 worth of copper wire from a 
building undergoing renovation.

Verizon spokesman Jon Davies said the company had lost $297,795 in 
copper since 2006 in California alone, not including money spent on 
work to replace the wire or loss of service to customers.

"This is a national problem," he said. "We try to keep our cables 
high on the poles to make it harder to get, but the people who do 
this are highly motivated, and they have the equipment to get at it."

On a good night, a criminal can easily make more than $1,000. In 
remote Painted Hills in the Coachella Valley, $10,000 worth of wire 
was taken from a single windmill. Suspects were later caught.

In August, San Bernardino County sheriff's deputies arrested a 
Newberry Springs couple they say had stripped 10,000 pounds of copper 
from an Edison solar plant in Daggett over a three-month period and 
had sold it for $16,000.

In Adelanto, deputies recently found a man suffering severe 
electrical burns to his hands. They said he had cut into a live wire 
while breaking into a Southern California Edison box. Not only did he 
seriously injure himself, but he also blew out transformers, which 
sparked numerous brush fires, deputies said.

Others have had arms and legs blown off by live wires, and in one 
case a man was electrocuted while climbing inside a generator trying 
to steal copper, according to San Bernardino County sheriff's deputies.

The Riverside Unified School District has been hit 10 times since 
January, losing nearly $60,000 in wire. The air-conditioning units 
were targeted.

"The large copper cable that feeds them is exposed and on the 
rooftop," said Mike Fine, deputy superintendent. "Classrooms have 
been disrupted, and we have had to move kids to other rooms. They had 
no lights, no nothing. This is money right out of the school's pocket."

Fontana, Bloomington and Rancho Cucamonga have had a flurry of metal thefts.

"We are getting hammered by it," said Det. Maggie Finneran of the San 
Bernardino County Sheriff's Department. "It's big here because of all 
the construction, and you have scads and scads of copper wire. Two 
weeks ago we had a ring of guys stealing irrigation pipes from 
agriculture land. A lot are small-scale [methamphetamine users] 
getting $300 or $400 a day. Recyclers often turn a blind eye, even 
though they are required to ask where it came from."

Deputies have conducted sting operations at recycling plants, seizing 
stolen copper and making arrests. There are 13 such businesses in the 
Fontana area alone.

"We review receipts each day. The average receipt used to be $20 or 
$30, and now it's around $200 or $300," Finneran said. "I say 99.9% 
of recycled copper goes to China, and they make products that they 
sell back to us."

On a recent day, bins loaded with copper wire and pipe were lined up 
at Alamo Recycling in Fontana. The business is on Valley Boulevard, a 
gritty industrial corridor of warehouses, scrap dealers and gas stations.

Men, women and families were recycling assorted metal. Children 
dropped empty beer and soda cans in containers while adults lugged 
around rusty pipes. The metal was weighed, and customers collected 
their money at a small window.

"The Chinese market sets the price for our metals," said Mendonca, 
Alamo owner. "If we get anything in here that looks even slightly 
shaky, I call the police."

At nearby Bloomington Recycling, Anthony Cooks said it was often hard 
to identify where the copper comes from.

"It's very difficult to track," said Cooks, chief operating officer 
of the business. "We have a hot sheet of what is stolen. We ask, 
'Does this belong to you?' and then look at their license. But as 
long as you have high unemployment rates out here, you will keep 
getting stolen material."

Copper is not nearly as precious as gold, but people have been 
stealing it for centuries.

"This has literally been going on forever. It rises and falls 
depending on the price of the commodity," said Ken Geremia, spokesman 
for the Copper Development Assn., which seeks to expand copper 
markets in North America.

"Copper is 100% recyclable material and has been recycled for 
millenia. It's also very important to the infrastructure of countries 
like China and India. That's one reason for the rise in demand. Last 
May copper reached historic highs of $4 per pound."

Criminals are also taking aluminum and brass, police say. Manhole 
covers and urns from cemeteries also show up. Even household 
recycling set at the curb is being swiped.

In Hemet and San Jacinto, thieves have gone after fire hydrants, 
which are made of brass and can weigh 170 pounds and yield up to $1 a 
pound from recyclers. Last month a suspect was arrested.

"We have had a dozen fire hydrants stolen over the past year," said 
Lt. Dean Evans of the Hemet police. "These guys are also stealing 
copper. I would venture to guess they are all meth users. If there 
was a fire near one of these spots, there would be nothing the fire 
department could do."
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MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman