Police launch two-day blitz on metals theft
LONDON (Reuters) - Police have launched a nationwide blitz on the theft of metal, a fast-growing crime fuelled by rising prices on world markets and insatiable demand from booming Asian economies.
Favourite targets for thieves have been church roofs for lead, railway signalling for copper and road signs for aluminium.
Manhole covers, drain grilles and even commemorative brass plaques have also been disappearing in a crime wave estimated to be costing the country over 300 million pounds a year.
Works of art have been favourite targets in recent years, particularly those cast in bronze.
In 2005, a 3 million-pound sculpture by Henry Moore was stolen in Hertfordshire and a few weeks later a 600,000-pound work was taken from the grounds of Roehampton University in southwest London.
The Association of Chief Police Officers (ACPO) said on Tuesday that 38 forces were visiting scrapyards and stopping suspect vehicles in the two-day blitz, which began on Monday.
ACPO's lead on metal theft, British Transport Police (BTP) Assistant Chief Constable Paul Crowther, stressed that metal theft was not a victimless crime.
"Thousands of people have seen their community facilities stolen or damaged by thieves looking for a quick gain, or have suffered service disruption to railways and telecoms," he added in a statement. Continued...
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