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Transient Meth Head Rakes In $95,000 By Stealing Copper to Support $100-a-Day Meth Habit
Phoenix New Times ^ | Thu., Aug. 4 2011 | James King

Posted on 08/12/2011 10:42:23 AM PDT by golux

Transient meth-head Kirk Wise probably made more money than you did last year -- and he didn't even have a job.

Wise, 45, is a professional copper thief who steals copper wire to support his $100-a-day meth habit. He's pretty good at it, too -- according to Wise, he's netted nearly $100,000 since January of 2010 by selling the copper to scrap-metal recycling businesses throughout the east Valley.

(...)

He admitted to everything -- he said he stole copper to support his meth habit and he'd netted $95,000 since last January. He told police he'd been stealing copper for three to four years, and has remained transient to make it harder for police to find him.

(Excerpt) Read more at blogs.phoenixnewtimes.com ...


TOPICS: Free Republic; Miscellaneous; US: Arizona
KEYWORDS: copper; drugs; economy; libertarian; meth; slavery; utopia
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To: MrShoop

Receiving stolen metal is how those yards make money. They know what they are doing. The could care less about anything other than getting caught.


21 posted on 08/12/2011 12:30:13 PM PDT by Anti-Bubba182
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To: golux

There was a tweaker in my home town who was bright enough to take a manhole cover with a serial number and name of the city on it to the scrap yard and try to sell it. He was arrested. I say that because it is no guarantee with the scrap yards. If they think they can get away with it, many will buy (obviously) stolen property like new house wiring.


22 posted on 08/12/2011 12:36:37 PM PDT by IamConservative (Do peeps that drive Smart Cars on freeways have a death wish? If not, they better have spare undies.)
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To: Anti-Bubba182

The “recycling” centers DO have an obligation to not accept obviously stolen goods. How can you not be suspicious when someone comes in with 20 brass grave markers? These scrapyards should be prosecuted fully. Even pawn shops won’t take obviously stolen items. They know they’re in deep poop if they do. And “I didn’t know it was stolen” doesn’t hold water.


23 posted on 08/12/2011 12:39:14 PM PDT by boop ("Let's just say they'll be satisfied with LESS"... Ming the Merciless)
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To: boop
The dealers don't get checked much and the resort and process the scrap real quick so that would be very difficult. The book is rarely thrown at them.

As for the junkie, the worse the better.

24 posted on 08/12/2011 12:59:52 PM PDT by Anti-Bubba182
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To: MrShoop

It’s the gungrabber argument because you’re blaming the non-criminals for the actions of criminals. According to gungrabbers all sales of guns are bad because some guns wind up in the hands of bad guys and the gun store doesn’t know which ones those are and can’t prevent it, and according to you recyclers are bad because some of the people they’re purchasing from have stolen the copper and the doesn’t know which ones and can’t prevent it.

The recyclers DON’T know who’s got their copper illegally. They can make some guesses, but they don’t know. Not until somebody gets busted.


25 posted on 08/12/2011 1:09:03 PM PDT by discostu (keep on keeping on)
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To: discostu

People that are involved in criminal enterprises always know what is going on, people living in the shady parts of life are not innocent, naive babes in the woods.

The recyclers can read their product and it’s origins and quality, and their suppliers.

Photo ID, good record keeping, license plate numbers, and an investigator to report to, and inspection of some of the yards, and revocation of business licenses would go a long way to stopping some of this.


26 posted on 08/12/2011 1:23:33 PM PDT by ansel12 ( Bristol Palin's book "Not Afraid Of Life: My Journey So Far" became a New York Times, best seller.)
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To: ansel12

The recyclers aren’t involved in a criminal enterprise. They’re buying a product that is readily available legally, and selling it legally. Sometimes the person they’re buying from didn’t get it legally, but that doesn’t make the recyclers criminals.


27 posted on 08/12/2011 1:27:08 PM PDT by discostu (keep on keeping on)
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To: discostu
Your analogy doesn't make sense. You are saying a seller isn't responsible for what he sells. I'm saying a seller is responsible for what he buys. Of course gun dealers check the serial numbers of guns when they buy them to see if they are stolen. Try getting caught with a stolen handgun and trying to get away with the excuse that you didn't know it was stolen.

I'm not blaming non-criminals for the action of criminals, I am saying these scrap yards are co-conspirators and criminals. It would just take a DA who gave a crap to prosecute. In California it would fall under section 496 of the penal code - receiving stolen property.

28 posted on 08/12/2011 1:27:56 PM PDT by Wayne07
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To: MrShoop

My analogy makes perfectly good sense. In both instances the wrong person is being blamed for things they did not do. You’re blaming the recycler for the fact that some but not all of the people they’re buying from are criminals and they have no way of differentiating.

You most certainly are blaming the non-criminals, and you just did it again. They are not co-conspirators or criminals, they’re people buying merchandise which is readily available legally and might, or might not, have been acquired by the seller illegally. If the law was the way you want it then everybody, including you, is a criminal, somewhere along the lines somebody gave you something that was not acquired legally at some point in its history. But you, just like the recyclers, have no way of knowing. If you want to throw them in jail lead by example, give yourself up.


29 posted on 08/12/2011 1:44:08 PM PDT by discostu (keep on keeping on)
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To: MrShoop
I am saying these scrap yards are co-conspirators and criminals. It would just take a DA who gave a crap to prosecute.

Not even an ambitious DA would waste his time and money trying to prove that a scrap dealer knowingly received "stolen scrap".

Reading the entire story would help explain to you how the guy was caught, and that was with the cooperation of the scrap dealer who still had the stolen wiring on hand and had the transaction receipt. And that was only because the copper wiring remained in the same length as it was when stolen which helped in identifying it..

You'll never get an arrest let alone a conviction of a scrap dealer who has absolutely no idea where his scrap comes from...........

30 posted on 08/12/2011 2:07:13 PM PDT by Hot Tabasco (You can't forfeit the game Chuck! If you go home you forfeit!)
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To: Hot Tabasco
It isn't scrap if it is stolen from working machines. Or, for example try this google search:

statue stolen for scrap

31 posted on 08/12/2011 2:17:33 PM PDT by Wayne07
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To: Anti-Bubba182
Receiving stolen metal is how those yards make money.

Wrongo Mr. Bubba, these yards were in existence long before the economy made it attractive for the ghetto scrappers (that's where it started) to start stealing........

Ten years ago, maybe even sooner, you never read of copper thieves because the cost of copper then was insignificant and not worth the time and energy needed to steal it from abandoned houses or whatever sources they used..........Hell, they never even bothered to bend over and pick up a penny.

It's only been in recent years that copper thieves have surfaced, due entirely on the rising cost copper on a global basis.........

32 posted on 08/12/2011 2:22:17 PM PDT by Hot Tabasco (You can't forfeit the game Chuck! If you go home you forfeit!)
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To: discostu

They are engaged in a criminal enterprise, you seem to think that they don’t know what is going on and you don’t seem interested in fixing the problem but instead defending the fences.

Criminals have always had their connections to front their products to or to help them in their crimes, from shady pawnshops to shady hotels, to shady auto repair shops, to shady recyclers, and on and on.

The very first business that the criminal deals with to make his crime possible and profitable always knows the score.


33 posted on 08/12/2011 2:32:29 PM PDT by ansel12 ( Bristol Palin's book "Not Afraid Of Life: My Journey So Far" became a New York Times, best seller.)
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To: MrShoop
It isn't scrap if it is stolen from working machines.

I never said it was......but to the scrap dealer, it is.

What do you propose MrShoop? Require the scrap dealer to demand from the scrap seller that he document every piece of scrap that he is selling to the dealer? And how would he do that MrShoop? What kind of documentation would you require the scrap seller to have to insure that the scrap he is selling was legally acquired?

I have a personal friend who salvages scrap between trucking jobs. Would you prefer that he gets a state issued "scrap salvager" license issued from the state to insure that he can be tracked down should he be discovered to have sold some illegal scrap to a scrap dealer????

34 posted on 08/12/2011 2:33:07 PM PDT by Hot Tabasco (You can't forfeit the game Chuck! If you go home you forfeit!)
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To: Hot Tabasco

I was dealing with copper thieves a lot longer than ten years ago.

Copper has always been profitable, I have been salvaging it and scrapping it since the early 1960s.


35 posted on 08/12/2011 2:35:33 PM PDT by ansel12 ( Bristol Palin's book "Not Afraid Of Life: My Journey So Far" became a New York Times, best seller.)
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To: MrShoop
My previous question to you MrShoop

Require the scrap dealer to demand from the scrap seller that he document every piece of scrap that he is selling to the dealer?

Lets see, my truck has 300 lbs. of rusted out steel farm equipment, 125 lbs. of old aluminum siding, another 125 lbs. of old iron railings, and 15 lbs. of copper tubing...........

So how much documentation would you require for that MrShoop?

36 posted on 08/12/2011 2:39:52 PM PDT by Hot Tabasco (You can't forfeit the game Chuck! If you go home you forfeit!)
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To: Hot Tabasco

True enough about plain old copper pipe. But when the lowlifes are bringing in entire air conditioners with sawed off connectors, or historical artifacts, or graveside urns, they can’t plausibly say “I had NO idea it was stolen”.


37 posted on 08/12/2011 2:40:02 PM PDT by boop ("Let's just say they'll be satisfied with LESS"... Ming the Merciless)
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To: ansel12

They aren’t engaged in a criminal enterprise, I’m interested in defending the truth.

How does the recycler know which person is bringing legit copper and which one isn’t? These aren’t shady anything, these are normal scrap metal/ recyclers you can find in the phonebook.


38 posted on 08/12/2011 2:50:14 PM PDT by discostu (keep on keeping on)
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To: ansel12
I have been salvaging it and scrapping it since the early 1960s.

I'm sure you have but it's only been the recent years of widespread house abandonments and loss of jobs that has turned copper theft into such a widespread problem.......

So what's your answer to stopping the scrap metal theft? What kind of restrictions would you like to see imposed on the scrap yard owners?

39 posted on 08/12/2011 2:51:49 PM PDT by Hot Tabasco (You can't forfeit the game Chuck! If you go home you forfeit!)
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To: discostu
You say that they have no way of differentiating, I say a homeless meth addict with $95,000 of scrap metal is apparent enough to make you complicit. The law doesn't presuppose or excuse idiocy.

Since it is a fact that knowingly receiving stolen goods, then our only disagreement is whether these scrap dealers know they are receiving stolen goods. I think it is obvious.

40 posted on 08/12/2011 2:57:10 PM PDT by Wayne07
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