NOVEMBER 2008
Detroit Edison boosts reward amount
for theft information
Detroit Edison boosted the amount
it will pay for information leading
to the arrest of copper thieves and
urged its customers to help stop
the growing problem of copper cable
and transformer theft by reporting
illegal activity.
Copper thieves have not only targeted
live power lines, but in recent months
have taken transformers from Detroit
Edison utility poles. Both practices
are not only illegal, but extremely
dangerous.
“We have to put a stop to copper
thievery,” said Michael Lynch, DTE
energy chief security officer. “This
is a dangerous activity for the people
stealing copper, but also for the
people affected by power outages
caused by copper theft. As recently
as last week we had 4,000 feet of
power lines stolen from one location
alone.”
DTE Energy is raising to $2,500 from
$1,000 the amount it will pay for
information leading to the arrest
of people stealing copper. In addition,
the company will pay $5,000, up from
$2,500, for information leading to
the arrest of people buying stolen
copper.
The number of copper theft incidents
this year is keeping pace with 2007’s
record incident rate, but what has
increased dramatically is the number
of transformers being stolen, Lynch
said. Last year, Detroit Edison experienced
nearly 250 incidents of thieves taking
copper from Detroit Edison power
lines and equipment.
While a majority of the thefts have
occurred in the Detroit area, copper
cable theft is a growing problem
across the state and across the country.
Both the Detroit City Council and
the Michigan Legislature has acted
to try to stem the tide of copper
thefts. The City Council amended
an ordinance to place stricter regulations
on scrap metal dealers and scrap
iron and metal processors, while
the state legislature placed tougher
penalties on certain entities caught
buying or selling stolen copper cable.
However, thefts have continued to
rise as the local economy has soured.
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