Moncton homeowner fed up with copper wire theft
When Jo-Anne Phillips and her husband Daniel Boudreau bought a 110-year-old duplex on Cameron Street in Moncton, N.B., in the fall, they knew it needed some upgrades.
Last week, they also found out it needed copper wiring and copper pipes after it was broken into.
Phillips said thieves cut the main power source in the basement and copper wires and pipes throughout the house were stripped.
The thieves came through the back door, but bolting it didn't help.
Two days later, the thieves came back and took whatever copper they didn't get the first time around.
Now, the couple, who own two other downtown properties, are left with a massive bill.
“Talking to the insurance company, the electrician and the plumbers, it looks like we're up around $35,000 to $45,000 to replace what has been ripped out of the house,” said Phillips. “In talking to the [metal] recycling companies, paid by the pound, they may have gotten $300 to $400 for what they took.”
Robert Nowlan's family has been in the scrap metal business for 36 years.
The vice-president of Tri Province Enterprises in Moncton said they work with the public and the police to deter any illegal activity.
Under provincial regulations, recycling companies are required to take the name, address and licence plate number of anyone who brings in metal.
“We have to have the weight, the dates, the times. Photographs are taken of the material and the people that are in here selling the product. We try to do as much as possible to ensure the product we are buying is not stolen property,” said Nowlan.
Phillips said she reached out to metal recycling depots in the city to see if anyone had come in with a plethora of copper that wouldn't be explainable.
Renovations and repairs continue at the sandstone home but Phillips' frustration level is through the roof.
“When I contacted the police they said there's nothing they can do for me. Unfortunately, the individuals that came in, from information from our neighbours, were on foot. They’re most likely homeless. The police said that’s quite frequent, that it’s homeless folks that are doing this,” said Phillips.
Codiac Regional RCMP told CTV News they are investigating, but they don't have any video or witnesses at this time.
Sgt. Johnathan White said they don’t have any video or witnesses at this time.
"We're looking to see if there's any new information to come forward," said White.
If the tens of thousands in damages and theft wasn't bad enough, Phillips said she also found human waste throughout the house.
“They also defecated and urinated in the home,” she said.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
W5 Investigates | How did a healthy teen die at a minor hockey camp?
The parents of young Ontario hockey player Ben Teague have been searching for answers since he died while at a team retreat in 2019. The mystery about what happened and the code of silence in hockey culture is explored in CTV W5's 'What Happened to Ben,' on CTVNews.ca and W5's official YouTube channel.

Donald Trump's call for protests gets muted reaction by supporters
Former U.S. President Donald Trump's calls for protests ahead of his anticipated indictment in New York have generated mostly muted reactions from supporters, with even some of his most ardent loyalists dismissing the idea as a waste of time or a law enforcement trap.
Conservatives forcing MPs to vote on striking new foreign interference study
In an effort to keep the foreign interference story at the forefront, and to do an apparent endrun around the Liberal filibuster blocking one study from going ahead, Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre is forcing MPs to debate and then vote on a motion instructing an opposition-dominated House committee to strike its own review.
6 missing after Old Montreal fire 'probably still in the rubble': Police
Officials are still looking for victims after a fire ripped through a building in Old Montreal last week, killing at least one person. At a press conference Monday morning, spokespersons for the Montreal police and Montreal fire department said six people are still missing. They come from various locations in Quebec, Ontario and the U.S.
opinion | Biden's Canada visit is long overdue and so are the issues facing the North American neighbours: expert
Questions abound as to why U.S. President Biden is only now making the visit to Canada, more than two years into his presidency.
Canada's among central banks try to calm markets after UBS deal to buy Credit Suisse
Some of the world's largest central banks came together on Sunday to stop a banking crisis from spreading as Swiss authorities persuaded UBS Group AG to buy rival Credit Suisse Group AG in a historic deal.
Woman suing Tim Hortons for $500K after hot tea spill left her 'disfigured'
An Ontario woman has launched a lawsuit seeking $500,000 from Tim Hortons after she suffered major burns from an alleged ‘superheated’ tea. The company has denied all allegations and said she was ‘the author of her own misfortune.'
China's Xi meeting Putin in boost for isolated Russia leader
Chinese leader Xi Jinping is due to meet with Vladimir Putin in a political boost for the isolated Russian president after the International Criminal Court charged him with war crimes in Ukraine.
Air passenger complaints triple in one year to pass 42,000 as backlog grows
The number of air passenger complaints to Canada's transport regulator is soaring, more than tripling to 42,000 over the past year.