From Deseret News archives:
Thieves at cemeteries preying on grave sites with recyclable metals
In West Virginia, it was vases bolted to headstones. In Washington state, it was bronze markers on veterans' graves. In Chicago, it was nearly half a million dollars' worth of brass ornaments.
"It's a crisis of the times," said Ruth Shapleigh-Brown, executive director of the Connecticut Gravestone Network, which monitors cemeteries for theft and vandalism. "People are finding a way to make money."
Across the country, police have reported mounting scrap metal prices translating into increased thefts that range from manhole covers and church downspouts to telephone and power lines.
Stealing from the dead is a practice that goes back far enough in history to be the subject of curses on the walls of Egyptian pyramids.
A decade ago, metal urns, flag holders and ornaments in cemeteries were mostly ignored by thieves, who instead stole grave markers and other stone fixtures for the antiques market, said Shapleigh-Brown.
"I don't know what could be more sacred than protecting our cemeteries," said West Virginia state legislator Kevin Craig, who co-sponsored a law against scrap metal theft after a bronze door was stolen from a tomb at a cemetery in his district in 2006.
The measure, passed last year, increases pressure on scrap dealers to avoid stolen metals by requiring them to keep records of sellers' identities and provide these records to police.
Still, thieves in June stole 150 copper vases worth about $18,000 from a St. Albans cemetery.
"It's a crime of opportunity," said St. Albans Police Chief Joe Crawford, whose department has arrested a suspect in the cemetery thefts.
"A cemetery is a walk in the park" compared to the closed coal mines and active power stations where thieves also seek out copper, he said.
One factor lessening the sting of such thefts is that many homeowners' insurance policies provide coverage for them under the category of "offsite personal property," said Robert Fells, general counsel for the International Cemetery and Funeral Association.
Those insurance policies don't cover some of the other things sought by thieves at cemeteries, though, which include antique gravestones, flowers and even, in a few grisly instances, human remains.
Most commonly, old graves are disturbed by people hunting for Revolutionary or Civil War relics to sell. In rare cases, body parts are removed by groups for use in occult ceremonies, said Nicholas Bellantoni, Connecticut's state archaeologist.
"It's kind of ghastly, but we've seen it," said Bellantoni.
Recent comments
Don�t people get what R.I.P. stands for?
Rest In
Peace
Leave...
Disgusted in Utah... | July 17, 2008 at 11:09 a.m.
- Marine recruiter pleads guilty 1:00 p.m.
- Bluefin tuna quota too high? 12:57 p.m.
- No. of U.S. going hungry increases 12:53 p.m.
- Atlantis lifts off on supply mission 12:48 p.m.
- Searchers find body of missing girl 12:46 p.m.
- Man sentenced in child beating 12:44 p.m.
- Climate deal possible 12:40 p.m.
- 5 men accused of poaching deer 12:36 p.m.
- Feds: Co. conspired to defraud U.S. 12:32 p.m.
- Group: Invest in electric cars 12:28 p.m.
- MWC expand? Get rid of deadweight
- Relieved Cougs prep for Falcons
- Wounded Utes limp home
- Apostle's wife felt comfort in attack
- Jazz rookies had to grow up quickly
- TCU stays 4th in AP; Y. 19th, U. 23rd
- Win in New Mexico good for Y?
- Big games keep UHSAA coffers full
- Bennett at center of GOP storm
- RSL surprised by Chicago's Fire
- TCU creams U.
233 - BYU happy to escape with victory
232 - Editorial: Mormons and gay rights
209 - Will state consider gay rights law?
155 - Can BYU root for (ick) Utah Utes?
131 - RSL heads to MLS title game
130 - Utes remain silent about BCS
120 - TCU stays 4th in AP; Y. 19th, U. 23rd
106 - Celtics crush Jazz
104 - 5A: Bingham rolls to title game
93
Maybe someone out there can help me understand how raising the state...
How do you handle kids and contests? Our oldest daughter, 7, is of the...
Bring Him back to Utah where he he excelled.
I would love to be able to do the same thing, the experience of attending the...
Seer stones and interpretation,The Bible teaches us to test prophets and...
TCU #1. I would take TCU over FL, Bama and TX. All those schools have had...
I'm with safety first on this one, happy that these kids are alive and...
Is ridiculously soft on crime. Only 6 months for felony child abuse? What a...
When you have a child, you are given the responsibility for that life by the...
Anonymous | 12:12 p.m. Who said anything about their religion? I think...
Conservatives couldn't sacrifice for the wars they supported by paying for...
Samuelson is wrong. The wild increases in insurance premiums are driven by...


