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Copper wire stolen from Newfoundland Power substation twice in 1 week: RCMP

Police say the same substation in South River was hit by thieves on Oct. 26 and 29, and the second incident caused substantial damage.

Thieves targeted South River substation on Oct. 26 and 29

Police say copper wire was stolen in two robberies from the Newfoundland Power substation in South River. (CBC)

The same Newfoundland Power substation in South River was the target of thieves twice in one week, with the second incident causing substantial damage and a large power outage, says the RCMP in Bay Roberts.

In a press release, the RCMP said someone cut the lock off the substation's gate on Oct. 26, went inside, and cut and stole copper wire from several electrical towers.

Police were called back to the substation on Springfield Road three days later, on Oct. 29, to find the lock had again been cut. This time, not only was copper wire cut and stolen, but the compound's high-voltage electricity system had been damaged.

That caused a power outage to nearly 3,000 nearby Newfoundland Power customers for more than four hours, and repair crews were still working Tuesday to fix all the damage, said police.

RCMP warned that tampering with grounding wire at such substations is very dangerous, not only to the people doing the tampering but to the employees sent to repair the damage.

RCMP ask anyone with information about the thefts to call the Bay Roberts detachment, or Crime Stoppers.

Read more from CBC Newfoundland and Labrador