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  • Porker rustling on the rise...

    http://www.nytimes.com/2011/09/25/us...e.html?_r=2&hp

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    Allen Brisson-Smith for The New York Times

    Ryan Bode, whose family has raised pigs for decades, said thieves broke into this barn in Lafayette, Minn., by cutting straight down some ventilation netting.

    Enlarge This Image

    Allen Brisson-Smith for The New York Times

    “Hundreds of pigs don’t just disappear,” said Marc Chadderdon, a sheriff’s investigator in Nicollet County.


    This month, 150 pigs — each one weighing more than an average grown man — disappeared from a farm building in Lafayette despite deadbolts on its doors. Farther north near Lake Lillian, 594 snorting, squealing hogs disappeared last month, whisked away in the dark.
    And in Iowa, with added cover from the vast stretches of tall cornfields, pigs have been snatched, 20 or 30 at a time, from as many as eight facilities in the last few weeks, said the sheriff of Mitchell County, adding that among other challenges, the missing are difficult to single out.
    “They all look alike,” said Curt Younker, the sheriff, who said he had only rarely heard of pig thefts in his decades on the job. “Suddenly we’re plagued with them.”
    Some livestock economists pointed to the thefts in this hog-rich region as one more sign of the grim economy, a reflection of record-high prices for hogs this year and the ease of stealing pigs from the large barns that are often far from the farmer’s house.
    “This is the hot commodity of the moment, like copper a few years ago and gold,” said Ryan Bode, whose family company, Rebco Pork, discovered that 150 of its pigs were missing on Sept. 16, shortly before they were to be taken to market.
    The loss was $30,000, he said, on top of the “ungodly high” price of corn that he had paid to feed those pigs for six months until they were fat enough to be sold. “And after all that, they’re not here,” he said.
    The Nicollet County sheriff’s investigator was swapping details with law enforcement authorities in other places where pigs have been taken and calling for tips of any sort, but Mr. Bode seemed doubtful about seeing his pigs again.
    “My guess is that they’re bacon and pork chops already,” he said.
    For the moment, as worried hog producers around the region pledged to strengthen their security systems and considered offering rewards to solve the string of cases, investigators in Iowa and Minnesota, which are among the nation’s top hog producers, were left with a tangle of complicated questions.
    Was this all the work of a single roving band of pig thieves, or were they isolated incidents with separate culprits, all driven by the high price of pigs (which are going for about $200 apiece right now, and were even higher last month)?
    And who would have enough experience with 270-pound pigs (a group that would not, for instance, simply march out of their barns with a whistle and a “come here, boy”) and sufficient equipment (at least a large livestock trailer) to pull off such heists?
    And where exactly would they have taken the pigs?
    “Hundreds of pigs don’t just disappear,” said Marc Chadderdon, a sheriff’s investigator who has worked in Nicollet County, home to about 33,000 people, since 1994 and said he had never before received a similar crime report.
    “It’s not exactly like stealing a pot of gold,” he added. “You have to do something with them.”
    Investigators suspect that the pigs may have been taken to meat-processing plants or affiliated “drop-off” facilities or that they were sold at auction barns, which are less common these days as more large pig producers have direct arrangements with food-packing companies.
    But that has raised an uncomfortable suggestion in an industry where many of the biggest farmers and pork buyers know one another personally and where a stranger pulling up to sell 100 hogs should give pause.
    “Someone in the business somewhere has the answer as to who’s doing this,” Mr. Chadderdon said.
    Changes in the way pigs are raised have probably made stealing them easier.
    The large, low-slung buildings that often house thousands of pigs, known as “finishing barns,” are often off gravel roads, far from most houses and busy towns, in part to avoid complaints about the smells of pig waste and other environmental concerns.
    In some, workers tend to a facility only a few times a day, but mostly leave it operating on its own, with automated feeding and water systems.
    As word of the thefts has spread, some farmers in both states said they were keeping closer count of their animals, considering adding more security systems or even tattooing their pigs as a way of identifying them, a practice already used by some farmers (though not in the cases of the missing pigs).
    In truth, no one here is precisely sure on what evening (or evenings) the 150 pigs were taken from this facility in Lafayette.
    It was not until the pigs here were heavy enough to be sold that Mr. Bode’s family company — which raises 60,000 pigs a year at eight such buildings — noticed that they were missing. The doors were always locked, but, strangely, there had been no sign of a break-in.
    Finally, after searching the building from top to bottom, workers spotted a razor-straight opening — just enough for a person to slip through — sliced all the way down heavy bird netting on a side of the building that automatically opens slightly to let air in on hot nights.
    “They definitely did their homework,” Mr. Bode said the other day, running his fingers over the gap in the netting. “And they definitely knew what they were doing.”
    Mr. Bode, 37, whose family has farmed around here for generations, recalled stories of a missing pig, perhaps even two, years ago.
    “In the past, that would have been just for himself, maybe, a way to fill the freezer,” Mr. Bode said. “But now, it’s different. This isn’t about putting food on the table.”

  • #2
    Re: Porker rustling on the rise...

    We've been seeing it down here in NZ as well.....more so sheep and cattlebeasts...not everyone can afford biometric/RFID devices for their herds yet...and they can be defeated anyway.

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    • #3
      Re: Porker rustling on the rise...

      I suppose we should have seen this coming. As the relative price of food to income rises, stealing food (even with the risk of getting caught and punished) becomes more prevalent. Of course, as the crime rises, then food producers have to pay large sums for upgrading or installing security systems, costs which will be passed on to consumers of course, continuing a vicious cycle. In a few more years, as food increases, Mission Impossible can do a movie on catching the "evil" people that are stealing from large agribusinesses.

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      • #4
        Re: Porker rustling on the rise...

        Originally posted by brent217 View Post
        I suppose we should have seen this coming. As the relative price of food to income rises, stealing food (even with the risk of getting caught and punished) becomes more prevalent. Of course, as the crime rises, then food producers have to pay large sums for upgrading or installing security systems, costs which will be passed on to consumers of course, continuing a vicious cycle. In a few more years, as food increases, Mission Impossible can do a movie on catching the "evil" people that are stealing from large agribusinesses.

        shhhh.... c1ue will never believe that part.

        i'm surprised to see him even posting an article about expensive food.

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        • #5
          Re: Porker rustling on the rise...

          Originally posted by doom&gloom
          shhhh.... c1ue will never believe that part.

          i'm surprised to see him even posting an article about expensive food.
          You just keep on digging your own grave.

          Even at $1/pound, a 400 pound pig is worth quite a lot of money.

          If people are willing to steal lead church roofs for less than $2/pound, why not a self-propelled commodity?

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          • #6
            Re: Porker rustling on the rise...

            Originally posted by brent217 View Post
            .. As the relative price of food to income rises, stealing food (even with the risk of getting caught and punished) becomes more prevalent...
            Stealing one hog could be someone desperate getting food.
            Stealing 150 hogs is organized crime for profit at a commercial scale.

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            • #7
              Re: Porker rustling on the rise...

              Originally posted by thriftyandboringinohio View Post
              Stealing one hog could be someone desperate getting food.
              Stealing 150 hogs is organized crime for profit at a commercial scale.
              just another 'only in america'

              and one wonders who the buyer(s) would be, never mind where/how they get stored (hid), fed, watered, shipped, never mind slaughtered without _someone_ knowing/noticing

              and then theres the problem with the 'exhaust' as ms shiny! put it on a diff topic...

              not insignificant issues for the porcine purloiners to deal with, eh?

              out here, as elsewhere, we have a problem with copper theft and suddenly/recently, catalytic converters (from cars) - was even funnier to note a concurrent and just as sudden appearance in the newspaper-classifieds of ads looking to buy them

              causing one to wonder just _what_ has to happen before the law starts to put 2+2 together on these 'investigations' and starts monitoring the established brokerages and/or requires _documentation_ on both sides for the transactions involved - cant just hide 150 oinkers in yer garage - nor can ya just sell em at a flea market or roadside 'farm stand'

              and just how many people have catalytic converters laying around to justify paying for newspaper ads?

              these 2 examples are of the type that _should_ make a cop/detective in even the smallest towns go: hmmmmm...



              No, never," the lieutenant says. "I couldn't do that." Oliver suggests that Columbo's brilliant mind might be put to better use in another field. He asks the detective if he has ever considered another line of work.
              The Bye Bye Sky-High I.Q. Murder Case

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: Porker rustling on the rise...

                Originally posted by thriftyandboringinohio View Post
                Stealing one hog could be someone desperate getting food.
                Stealing 150 hogs is organized crime for profit at a commercial scale.
                Really gives the name "chop shop" a new meaning....

                But still, the estimated loss was $30K. That's a serious amount of effort (no way you do this alone) for not that much profit in the end.

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                • #9
                  Re: Porker rustling on the rise...

                  not a dollar a pound, but like everything else, you make up s**t as you co along...

                  http://agebb.missouri.edu/mkt/bull7c.htm

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                  • #10
                    Re: Porker rustling on the rise...

                    The article clearly states, 270-lb hogs, average $200/each. But *no* way they'd get that on the black (or grey) market.

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Re: Porker rustling on the rise...

                      As the American People (and all the world's people) inevitably get poorer due to Financial Elite greed, resource depletion, climatic disruption, etc., crime will rise. To know what this will be like, I have the benefit of two examples from already poor countries: my wife's experiences in her town of 50,000 in southern Ukraine, and the tales from my friend's Filippino wife's home village.

                      In Ukraine, my wife's parents live a very modest life. They have two cows, two pigs, some chickens and a big garden out back. The house is small, with an outhouse, and they do not have many possessions. Not trusting the banks after having lost all their savings in the early 90s after the Soviet breakup, they keep their meager savings hidden on the property. This home-banking is common in Ukraine. Even in this state of poverty, they need someone to house sit whenever they leave, even for a short time. If they don't, they will be robbed . . . .

                      Every night around dusk, thousands of dogs can be heard barking. Almost all property owners have guard dogs that are kept outside 24/7. My wife's parents have four vicious dogs on chains, strategically place around their 1/2 acre property. This protection is only partially effective, since theives will commonly gas guard dogs or shoot them with a silencer-equipped gun before getting down to work.

                      My friend's wife's village in the Philippines is similar, and they have even less to steal.
                      Their small compound has high fencing, but still the occasional theif makes an attempt, and will be chased back over the wall by one of the younger boys brandishing a gun. The mother sleeps each night next to the chicken coop to avoid chicken rustlers. When visiting these relatives, my friend and his wife have an armed body guard accompany them when they go to and from the bank (usually a relative with a gun).

                      I have considered these two examples in my own planning for the future . . . .

                      Right now we don't worry about theft, as it is relatively non-existent in our rural farm area. Unprotected corn fields line the roads, and animals occupy fields with easily accessed animal fences. People leave farm machinery lying about.
                      The most significant occurance of theft recently was a house under construction and an abandonned house that were both stripped of copper. I have never heard of any livestock being taken.


                      I think raising cattle would be a good business to weather the Depression, and we are doing so on a very small scale on our own small farm. But we have pasture for less cows than I would like to raise. I would like to expand by buying additional land, but I don't not trust that any cows kept out of sight will not be stolen when crime rises in the future. Thus, I will only buy land if the neighbors on either side of me sell, so my herd can been seen from our house.

                      Our property borders the road. In order to prevent future snatch-and-run theft, we have considered building a high wall with glass shards or barbed wire on the top. We now have two gates leading up to our tractor/storage barn, which we will start locking each night when conditions warrant. Our chicken house, sheep and goat sheds and cow barn are all lockable, and I will start putting the animals up each night when I feel there is a threat. Motion detectors, security lights and other alarms have been purchased, but not yet installed. I have added to my varmint and deer gun collection by purchasing a 9mm handgun . . . for human varmints. I hope I never have to use it.

                      The world is changing . . . .
                      Those in need will take from those that got.
                      If you got, you better be prepared to protect it, or you will lose it.
                      raja
                      Boycott Big Banks • Vote Out Incumbents

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                      • #12
                        Re: Porker rustling on the rise...

                        You need about 2 acres per cow if in good grass with pasture rotation for a herd. Or you can buy feed, but that kind of defeats the purpose I guess.

                        A couple of chicken tractors could work pretty well for you if you have large perimeter fencing going for you. Not beef, but not bad either.

                        There will always be theft, so community becomes the most important aspect. If you have good community, you have some neighbors lookin' out for you and you for them.

                        On the farms in SA, I have no real community, though I know one neighbor will call in if someone is on one farm, and I have a caretaker who lives for free on another just to keep an eye on it. But they cannot be there all the time. On the third I will see if I can get another freebie renter, though there is no running water or septic as of now. Perhaps in a year. That farm is right on the outskirts of a town, so I will probably grow sorghum there, which no sane human will want to eat, and thus avoid the kind of theft corn might bring.

                        Consider some dummy video cameras strategically placed around the house and grounds, and a few signs plus some motion sensor lights. That coupled with "outside dogs" should be enough to make all but the most determined thief look at the less guarded place down the road.

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