The copper wire would be taken and stripped, and then sold to a Long Island scrap yard for cash, after which, the proceeds were split amongst the participants in the scheme.
They took anything they could get their hands on,” said a source close to the investigation.
On Friday, the union first received word of the more than two-year investigation by the Nassau County district attorney, the MTA inspector general’s office and the Metropolitan Transportation Authority Police Department.
The fifteen linemen — who have been on the job from between 5 and 25 years — were taken out of their rotations upon arrival at work Tuesday morning. The LIRR has suspended the workers with pay and will suspend them without pay once they are charged.
The workers are set to turn themselves in at 7 a.m. Friday in Mineola, where they will be hit with felony grand larceny, possession of stolen property, conspiracy and other charges.
The National Insurance Crime Bureau,has estimated that metal theft costs American businesses around $1 billion a year.
“Thieves have been willing to go to almost any length to obtain the metal,” according to the report.
“They have stripped sheets of metal from building rooftops, stolen memorial decorations from cemeteries, ripped apart air conditioners for the copper coils within, and stripped homes and buildings of wiring and piping.” [see ElectricWeb | Blogger, Sep 14, 2012]
Nice Info! There are lots of metal like copper, iron, aluminum which when not used for a long period of time they will become useless so it always a good choice that to sell it.
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