Advertisement

Theft of Irrigation Pipes Soars, but Police Efforts Cropping Up

SPECIAL TO THE TIMES

As far as heists go, irrigation pipe theft certainly lacks the Hollywood-style intrigue and romance of, say, international diamond smuggling.

Even so, the lure of easy cash coupled with a jump in the price of scrap aluminum has led to a rash of big-money thefts from a number of Ventura County’s verdant agricultural fields.

“Pipe theft has always been a problem, but this is the first year that we have seen this much stolen,” said Deputy Eric Nelson of the Sheriff’s Department’s Rural Crimes Prevention Unit. “It’s gotten out of hand.”

Advertisement

According to authorities, more than $195,000 worth of pipe has been reported stolen this year in Ventura County compared with only $1,200 worth in 1996. In just two days in July, more than $49,000 in aluminum irrigation pipe was stolen during four early morning heists.

Pipe theft has been around for about as long as the county’s soil has been tilled, but for the most part, growers have considered it a problem of lesser concern. But no more.

Authorities said this year’s skyrocketing statistics illustrate that the problem has gotten much larger and the criminals, who can receive as much a 50 cents per pound of scrap aluminum, more sophisticated.

Advertisement

Today’s pipe pilferers are often organized in syndicates, some of which operate out of Los Angeles residences.

“There’s a lot of money laying around out there,” said Rex Laird, executive director of the Ventura County Farm Bureau, which has urged growers to take preemptive measures like numbering and hiding their pipe before it’s installed. “We’ve had instances where there have been rings being run out of apartments in Compton and migrants are hired to steal it.”

*

The problem, however, is not confined to Ventura County, but is becoming rampant throughout the state.

Advertisement

According to Carole Richwine of the Sacramento-based California Farm Bureau Federation, pipe theft has growers from Shasta to San Diego counties worried.

“It’s one of those factors that are making farming very difficult,” she said. “It cuts into the farmers’ bottom line and now it’s become one of those costs they’ve got to factor in.”

Richwine said her organization does not keep statistics on how much pipe theft has cost growers throughout California.

*

However, state and local law enforcement agencies recognize the growing problem and have joined together to help combat it.

Steve Gill, owner of Rio Farms in Oxnard who lost an estimated $6,000 worth of pipe during one of the July thefts, said he has taken steps to protect his farm, but admitted there is only so much he can do.

“We’ve started numbering our pipe and moving it away from the road,” he said. “Hopefully, we’ll just make it too hard for them to take.”

Advertisement

Irrigation pipe is generally sold in 20-foot sections at a cost of about $35. To adequately irrigate an acre of farmland, growers generally require about 400 feet of pipe, or $700 worth.

According to Nelson, the thieves generally target the bisected fields of onion, celery and sod in the Oxnard Plain late at night when the only witnesses are likely to be rabbits or the occasional coyote.

They work in teams of two or more out of rented moving vans, loading pipe by the ton. They normally raid piles of unused pipe, but it isn’t unheard of for thieves to dismantle entire irrigation systems.

To throw off any suspicious buyers, the thieves take only sections that are dirty and spotted with corrosion, leaving the shiny new lengths. They will even bend and scuff the pipe to make it look like unusable scrap.

*

By morning, the thieves are in Los Angeles or San Diego counties or points farther north ready to peddle their loot to unsuspecting scrap yards, according to Richwine.

In response to the rash of thefts, the Ventura County Sheriff’s Department has stepped up its efforts to combat agricultural theft by urging growers to make it more difficult for thieves to target their pipe.

Advertisement

Deputies have also begun coordinating with the Los Angeles Police Department’s Scrap Metal Detail to hunt down pipe thieves and have already met with some success.

On July 28, Los Angeles police officers arrested two men suspected of stealing the $6,000 worth of pipe from Rio Farms. The men, who had sold the pipe a week before their arrest, were found asleep at the front gate of a scrap yard, waiting to sell another large load of pipe, authorities said.

Authorities and growers agree that as long as there is a market for recycling aluminum, irrigation pipe theft will remain a problem.

*

In years when the price of aluminum goes down, pipe theft virtually evaporates, while in years like this, with increased demand, thieves can’t get enough of the tubular booty.

“It’s not something that we’ll be able to stop altogether,” Nelson said. “But with all the educations and investigation we’re doing now, we’ll definitely be able to put a dent in it.”

Advertisement