Man Electrocuted While Trying To Steal Power Line

Man Electrocuted While Trying To Steal Power Line

By Keith Eldridge

FIFE - A thief went after a precious metal and paid for it with his life. It was copper electrical wire in a live high voltage power line.

Fife police say two men came out in the dead of night armed with a rope. They thought they would just toss the line over the wire and pull it down.

But before that could happen electricity came down the rope, electrocuted one and burned the other. A staggering 55,000 volts came down the rope passed through their hands into their bodies and out their feet.

Julian LaPointe, 22, of Tacoma was killed.

The sparks caught the grass on fire. Investigators from Puget Sound Energy were on the scene much of Friday trying to piece together what happen.

It is not the first time thieves have targeted live power lines, but there's a reason it doesn't happen very often.

"It's not highly valuable," said Det. Jeff Nolta with the Fife Police Department. "If you get enough of it you get a few dollars, but certainly not enough to risk your life with lines that you don't know if they're live or dead."

Electrician Joshua Vasquez explained, "This is what they want. They go by weight so the more they collect and they figure they can get those power lines and maybe it might be more."

Vasquez said thieves often target new home construction ripping the wires right out of the walls hoping to get up to $1.50 a pound. But he can't believe someone would risk taking on a live power line.

"You've got to respect electricity. A lot of people don't and they think they can just do whatever, but you have to respect it." KOMO 4 News told him, "One man paid for it with his life." "That's sad," he responded.

Investigators believe the pair may have mistaken this high voltage line for the lower voltage line across the train tracks or an abandoned power line further down the tracks.

It was a costly mistake just for a little bit of copper.

The second man injured is at Harborview Medical Center with burns on his hands and a foot, but he is expected to recover.

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