Submitting Campus
Prescott
Department
Global Security & Intelligence Studies
Document Type
Article
Publication/Presentation Date
4-21-2026
Abstract/Description
By any traditional measure, scrap and metal theft has long been categorized as a property crime, costly, disruptive, and frustrating, but rarely viewed as an immediate threat to human life. That framing, however, no longer reflects reality. What was once considered a nuisance crime has evolved into something far more consequential, particularly when it intersects with critical infrastructure.
Building on the risks outlined in “Scrap Disposal: When the End of the Supply Chain Becomes a Brand and Public Safety Risk,” by Marcos Fontes, a more serious dimension comes into focus when essential systems are targeted. In these cases, the impact extends well beyond inconvenience or reputational damage. It begins to affect life safety, regulatory compliance, and the overall resilience of the communities these systems are designed to support. What may initially appear as opportunistic theft can quickly escalate into a cascading failure with very human consequences.
Publication Title
Security Magazine
Publisher
BNP Media
Scholarly Commons Citation
Saquella, A. (2026). When Metal Theft Becomes a Life Safety Crisis. Security Magazine Retrieved from https://commons.erau.edu/publication/2464
Additional Information
Please access the version-of-record published in Security Magazine here.