Rising prices make crops tempting target for thieves
Thefts have farmers scrambling for deterrents
Kevin Libin, National Post Published: Thursday, March 27, 2008
It was a fluke situation. Lawrence Penner normally never leaves his grain in the back of his truck. He and his brothers, who farm together in Cola, Man., have never all been out of town at the same time. But one week in February, Mr. Penner ran short of storage space and loaded his canary seed, due to be delivered to a buyer the following week, into his truck ahead of time.
He and his partners left it there a few days, unattended. When they returned, they discovered the truck and its cargo had been stolen. Whoever did it had brought back the truck. The grain was gone.
"It's somebody that knew what they were doing," Mr. Penner says, adding that he suspects the $10,000 load of seed, the price of which has tripled in 12 months, "probably isn't too far from here."
He is just one of a growing number of farmers victimized by grain rustlers: As the price of commodities has soared, so has the incidence of agricultural thefts.
It's a problem on both sides of the border. Marquis, Sask., farmer Doug Froehlich had 1,200 bushels of canola snatched from his grain bins last month - a booty worth roughly $16,000.
In January, Kansas police began investigating nearly a dozen reports of thieves driving their trucks up to farm bins and siphoning out tens of thousands of dollars worth of wheat. A bushel of spring wheat, which has historically traded between $3 and $7, has spiked as high as $24 in recent weeks.
"The value of it now is such that it would be very worthwhile for a thief," says Maureen Fitzhenry, a spokeswoman at the Canadian Wheat Board.
<b>Whoa - just a minute!</b>
Is that the CWB suggesting that there is still grain on American farms? Is this the same CWB that has been saying for some time now that there's very little grain left on farms in the US because US farmers sold too early?
My head is spinning!! I'm not sure what to believe now!
Thefts have farmers scrambling for deterrents
Kevin Libin, National Post Published: Thursday, March 27, 2008
It was a fluke situation. Lawrence Penner normally never leaves his grain in the back of his truck. He and his brothers, who farm together in Cola, Man., have never all been out of town at the same time. But one week in February, Mr. Penner ran short of storage space and loaded his canary seed, due to be delivered to a buyer the following week, into his truck ahead of time.
He and his partners left it there a few days, unattended. When they returned, they discovered the truck and its cargo had been stolen. Whoever did it had brought back the truck. The grain was gone.
"It's somebody that knew what they were doing," Mr. Penner says, adding that he suspects the $10,000 load of seed, the price of which has tripled in 12 months, "probably isn't too far from here."
He is just one of a growing number of farmers victimized by grain rustlers: As the price of commodities has soared, so has the incidence of agricultural thefts.
It's a problem on both sides of the border. Marquis, Sask., farmer Doug Froehlich had 1,200 bushels of canola snatched from his grain bins last month - a booty worth roughly $16,000.
In January, Kansas police began investigating nearly a dozen reports of thieves driving their trucks up to farm bins and siphoning out tens of thousands of dollars worth of wheat. A bushel of spring wheat, which has historically traded between $3 and $7, has spiked as high as $24 in recent weeks.
"The value of it now is such that it would be very worthwhile for a thief," says Maureen Fitzhenry, a spokeswoman at the Canadian Wheat Board.
<b>Whoa - just a minute!</b>
Is that the CWB suggesting that there is still grain on American farms? Is this the same CWB that has been saying for some time now that there's very little grain left on farms in the US because US farmers sold too early?
My head is spinning!! I'm not sure what to believe now!
Comment