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Copper thefts

September 10, 2008

Metal thieves steal entire 120-foot radio tower

We hear a lot about copper thieves stealing air-conditioners, transformers and pipes.

But thieves in Somerset County, Pa., went all out to get their metal.

They stole an entire 120-foot radio tower from a remote location. The unused tower had to be cut up and hauled off by the thieves and police can't figure out how they did it without being noticed.  They also stole a transformer full of copper wiring from the tower.

The tower's owners say they were in negotiations with a company to use the tower to provided wireless Internet for the town of Windber and say they've now lost a lot of money from the potential deal.

-- Lance Murray

December 19, 2007

Copper pirates strike again, but why copper?

Copper_thefts_4Copper pirates struck again recently, this time in Mansfield, where police have reported arrests.

See today's report by Staff Writer Paul Bourgeois.

Copper has a hot commodity for thieves in recent years, resulting in a wide range of thefts, frequently the copper tubing from air conditioning units, like the ones pictured in this photo from Star-Telegram archives.

Some thieves, however, have scaled power poles to cut away copper wiring; a few consequently met gruesome deaths by electrocution.

Staff Writer Mark Agee recently reported that "construction sites have been hit hard, as have large buildings whose big air conditioners are copper-rich, such as schools and churches. Thirteen rooftop air conditioners from the Fort Worth school district were mined for copper last year, and the burglars did $54,000 in damage."

But why copper?

Do a spot check on the New York Mercantile Exchange and you'll see why. The price per pound for copper has tripled since 2003 when it cost about $1. Today it's around $3 a pound.

Analysts say world-wide demand for nonferrous metals, including copper, has accelerated.

Reuters recently reported that China and its ever-growing economy are expected to consume 4.95 million metric tons of refined copper in 2008. By comparison, China consumed 3.9 million metric tons last year.

But crime resulting from the copper shortage isn't just a North Texas Problem.

The Associated Press recently reported earlier this year that Italian police confiscated more than half a ton of copper piled in the woods outside Turin. The thefts from rail facilities delayed trains because they hurt automatic signal systems, forcing crews to use slower, manual systems.

Meanwhile, back in Tarrant County, municipalities have changed ordinances to combat the problem. For example, Agee reported, the North Richland Hills City Council recently agreed to allow plastic water-distribution piping to thwart copper thefts from construction sites. Fort Worth now requires scrap yards to keep records of whom they buy from.

-- Bill Miller

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