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Thieves make off with 1.6 kilometres of pipe

Cornwallis residents alerted by noise from bold late-night digging

Larry Powell/Spectator by Larry Powell/Spectator
View all articles from Larry Powell/Spectator
Article online since May 11st 2008, 11:51
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Thieves make off with 1.6 kilometres of pipe
This pile of pipe was found by RCMP at a scrap metal yard in Marshalltown after 1.6 kilometres of pipe were dug up and removed from the old abandoned rail bed between Moose River and Cornwallis Park. Const. Dale Guy photo
Thieves make off with 1.6 kilometres of pipe
Cornwallis residents alerted by noise from bold late-night digging
By Lawrence Powell

The Spectator

and John DeMings

The Courier

NovaNewsNow.com

Apparently nothing is safe. Thieves made of with 1.6 kilometres of pipe between Cornwallis Park and Moose River sometime in the first week of May. And much of the pipe was either buried in the ground or running through wooden enclosures.

Annapolis RCMP Const. Dale Guy said Friday that 110 pieces of pipe, 40 feet long and two feet in diameter, were dug up by an excavator and apparently sold to an unsuspecting scrap metal dealer in Marshalltown.

Guy said that scrap iron is fetching about $200 a ton and he estimates that the pipe dug up from an old water system along the abandoned railway line weighed about 120 tons and might have been worth as much as $24,000. One report said thieves received $12,000.

It was a complaint about noisy night work that led to the discovery of the theft. Rick Jacques, the Rails to Trails coordinator for the region, said he was contacted early last week by a Cornwallis resident who was upset by the late night noise coming from the rail bed.

“We weren’t doing any work,” said Jacques.

A check with the Department of Natural Resources, who owns the property, and the County of Annapolis, determined that they were not doing any work. Jacques went to Cornwallis and discovered that excavators had torn up the side of the rail bed and removed the pipe.

Annapolis RCMP Const. Dale Guy said police heard from Jacques at 6 p.m. on May 6 and RCMP were able to stop a truck with an excavator and from there were able to determine who was working for who and where the pipe was being taken.

On May 8 police obtained a search warrant for a Marshalltown scrap metal company.

“We commenced with seizing the alleged stolen pipe,” Guy said. “The proprietor of the estavlishment had no idea that the pipe was stolen and cooperated with police throughout the entire operation.”

Guy said 110 pieces of pipe were loaded onto a truck in six loadsand taken away to an undisclosed location where it is being held as evidence. He said each truckload weighed about 20 tons.

Guy said police have identified suspects and the investigation continues.

“Residents living along the old railway line are upset at what has taken place and the damage it has caused,” Guy said.

Amazingly enough, after the thieves dug up sections along the rail bed, they laid down straw to cover the mess.

Guy said excavator tracks on the trail run from Moose River, through Cornwallis park behind Lifeplex, and continue west towards Bear River. The waterline was put in place when Cornwallis was built during the Second World War and was the main source of water to the base and its residents. Over the years, the infrastructure deteriorated and was eventually replaced by the county.

“We had plans for it, but somebody else apparently had plans for it too,” said Annapolis County Warden Peter Newton. “They recognized an opportunity.”

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