Knoxville police have been searching for
the people who stole nine HVAC units from several small businesses in
Franklin Square.
Customers at Sami's Cafe sat inside the warm restaurant eating as snow
fell outside the window Monday. It sounds nice, but owner Sam Natour
told local news outlets that it could have been quite the opposite.
"I'm just glad it's not hot outside, because I probably would have had
to close. People wouldn't like sitting in a hot place," he said.
Police told him, the people responsible wouldn't reap the benefits of
stealing the units.
"(They said) the salvage companies have a new policy, that when someone
turns in something like that, they have to show information and license
number and everything," Natour said. "A lot of them are not going to do
that."
Since Tennessee implemented that law, Tennessee Metals insisted they
have followed it. Buyer Brandon Watkins said they are required to
fingerprint anyone selling scrapped metal, file their ID and even still,
there's a five-day waiting period for those selling copper.
"The only person allowed to get paid cash for an aluminum copper
radiator is someone that has a scrap metal license," Watkins said.
He added, even if it was legal, from a business perspective, it's just
not worth it.
"(With an) aluminum copper radiator, you're a dollar/pound," he gave as
an example, "If it's 25 pounds, that's 25 bucks."
And oftentimes, it's not even that, said Natour.
"These units don't really have that much copper in them. It's really not
worth it. To me it's not," Natour said. "Maybe to them, it is."
He added, he wished thieves knew that. It could have saved both parties
a lot of trouble.
"They'll probably be in the bottom of the lake if they can't sell them
to the salvage company," Natour said.
Police have been checking nearby businesses to see if any security
cameras caught anything. |
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