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SCI Says Corrupt Shops and Scrapyards Profiting From Stolen Goods

SCI report

A state watchdog agency says corrupt pawn shops, secondhand goods stores, and scrap yards in New Jersey are taking advantage of the opioid epidemic to maximize their profits.

State Commission of Investigation spokeswoman Kathy Riley says those operators regularly accepted metal and other merchandise from addicts who stole those items from cellphone towers and utility substations to get money for their drug habit.

“It was obvious that these individuals were not employees of these utilities, but yet they would return to the same scrapyard maybe three times a day, cars loaded down with so much metal that they were dragging on the ground. And this stuff was readily bought and accepted by these places.”

In some cases, Riley says the corrupt operators directed customers who were addicts to steal in-demand items that could be resold at a profit.

She says the thefts included the plundering of copper wiring and heavy-duty backup batteries from cellphone towers, the removal of wire from utility substations, and aluminum street lamps from highways.

“These are things that put all residents in jeopardy because the impact of these thefts are widespread undermining things like cellphone service during outages, compromising the power grid, and contributing to delays on commuter rail lines.”

The Commission recommends giving the State Police the authority to oversee the licensing of scrap yards and secondhand stores and requiring those businesses to upload detailed sales transactions to an online database accessible by law enforcement.