A
motive for the Saturday night damage spree wasn't clear, said
Moore County Sheriff Ronnie Fields. Due to outages, schools will
be closed Monday and potentially longer. Sunday church services
and a well-known golf resort were disrupted.
The incidents were being investigated by local, state and
federal law enforcement agencies, including the FBI, Fields
said. U.S. Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm said on Twitter
that she had been in contact with Duke Energy Corp, which owns
the substations, and the Department of Energy was working with
other agencies to investigate and respond.
"FBI Charlotte is investigating the willful damage to power
facilities in Moore County," the federal law enforcement agency
said, referring to its offices in Charlotte, North Carolina. "We
are in regular contact with local law enforcement and private
sector partners."
About 64% of Moore County's electric customers remained without
power on Sunday night in the largely rural area about 90 miles
(145 km) east of Charlotte, according to tracking site
poweroutage.us.
The lights went dark at about 7 p.m. Saturday for 40,000 homes
and businesses in Moore County. It was "a targeted attack. It
wasn't random," Fields said. Utility workers found gates broken
and evidence of gunfire damage to equipment.
The outages could stretch through Thursday, said Jeff Brooks,
spokesperson for Duke Energy, because of the extent of the
damage.
Church services were canceled at the Pinehurst United Methodist
Church. At the famed Pinehurst Resort, managers scrambled Sunday
to make sure golfers could still tee off.
A curfew was in effect for Sunday night and a shelter that can
hold up to 250 people was opened, officials said.
Fields dismissed online rumors that the incident was connected
to a drag show.
(Reporting by Rich McKay in Atlanta and reporting by Sharon
Bernstein in Sacramento; Additional reporting by Christopher
Bing in Washington, D.C.; Editing by Lisa Shumaker and Cynthia
Osterman)
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