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Mettle of Officers on Junk Patrol Is Bad News for Steal Industry

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Times Staff Writer

Although they don’t ignore steely-eyed characters sporting pistol-sized bulges under their jackets, as a rule Detectives Bob Readhimer and Billy Heinlein seek less obvious crooks.

The trail begins for these detectives, known by fellow Los Angeles police officers as “the junk cops,” in places such as Joe’s Scrap Metal & Sales Co. in North Hollywood.

On a recent visit to the scrap yard, Readhimer spotted evidence of the culprit who is simultaneously the officers’ bane and bread: the elusive metal thief. What caught Readhimer’s eye were five lengths of copper tubing lying on the ground next to a stack of dead car batteries.

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“These are highly suspicious,” Readhimer said. Crouching for a closer look, he noted the pipes’ brassy color and the unfaded markings indicating the manufacturer’s name and specifications. The newness of the pipes made it unlikely that anyone but a thief would have sold them as scrap.

Joe’s was the second of nine San Fernando Valley scrap yards the two detectives visited that day in search of metal thieves, who have been a steady concern of police since 1945, when the first two-man detail of junk cops was assigned to stem the theft of copper wire from public utilities.

Last year, the detail uncovered more than 200 cases of metal theft citywide. Typically, each will involve an average of about $500 worth of stolen material, Readhimer estimated, although many thefts range much higher in value.

“Most people don’t think the Police Department would have two detectives assigned to look for junk,” he said. But in the Valley, there is clearly a need for them.

The Valley, which has about one-fifth of the city’s scrap yards, accounts for about a third of the more than $1 million in stolen metal recovered annually by the detectives, Readhimer said.

Downtown Los Angeles and the city’s harbor area are also sites of many recoveries, but the Valley’s 12 large scrap yards yield slightly more because the areas they encompass are broader, said Readhimer, 44, who has been chasing metal thieves for eight years.

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“We know the metals,” he said. “We know what it may cost a victim to replace those metals. It may cost him his company. It may bring him bankruptcy.”

Yet, almost in the same breath as Readhimer and Heinlein bemoan the exploits of the metal thieves, both say hunting them has been the best police job they’ve ever had.

Heinlein, 43, a 19-year police officer who has been a junk cop only three months, said his new job already has stirred a passion in him.

“I’ve worked narcotics, the buy team, vice, prostitution, pornography, gambling, divisional detectives for five years, rape, robbery, homicide, everything,” Heinlein said. “This is better than anything else I’ve ever done.”

Readhimer concurred. His biggest case, he recalled, was the recovery of a 67-pound circular metal ring that was to be part of a National Aeronautics and Space Administration space shuttle rocket booster.

In late 1985, the Canoga Park-based Rocketdyne division of Rockwell International had shipped the part to a Los Angeles subcontractor for X-raying to be sure there were no internal flaws, such as air bubbles.

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A thief snatched the ring, which was made of a high-grade, nickel-based alloy called Inconal, and took it to a nearby scrap yard. Not knowing that the piece was worth about $100,000 on the aerospace market, the thief sold it for $26 in the belief that it was stainless steel.

Readhimer got the call from Rockwell officials at 8 a.m. the next day, and in half an hour, he was on the phone with the scrap dealer who, despite his suspicions, had bought it and who had dutifully taken down the seller’s name and license-plate number. The thief later was caught.

Stealing aerospace metal actually is far less common than theft of aluminum, which seems to be the metal in most demand these days, the detectives said. Construction sites seem to be extraordinarily vulnerable because metal often is left in the open, but any company can fall victim to thefts, Readhimer said.

The detectives estimated that in about 70% of the cases, the thieves have been dishonest employees who began by stealing items as small as nuts and bolts.

“They start carrying out a little at a time,” Readhimer said. “They may carry it out in their lunch pail or their Thermos bottle.

“With the extra money, they may buy an extra piece of furniture or a TV,” he said. “That extra money now becomes very important to them, so they have to steal a little more to make payments. We see it snowballing.”

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The rest of the theft is by experienced pros who are better at covering their tracks, he said.

“Most of them don’t steal the obvious, the brand-new material, like the new copper tubing,” he said. “They will steal the stuff that has been lying outside several months that people don’t miss.”

Scrap dealers are required by law to report to police the sellers’ names and the items sold, except for cans, steel and batteries.

Perusal of the reports can lead to an investigation, such as one last month in which a Canyon Country woman and her boyfriend, a North Hollywood man, were arrested on suspicion of grand theft, the detectives said. They said the reports showed that the boyfriend had sold two 1,000-pound loads of copper to separate dealers on the same day; the material was later discovered missing from a Chatsworth firm where the woman worked as an office manager.

A company may discover missing metal on its own, Heinlein said. “It’s maybe nuts, bolts or screws with their specifications, and without those contracts, they’re out of business,” he said.

Other times, he said, “it’s backwards. You’re finding parts with their name on it before the victims even knew it was gone.”

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