North Carolina electric grid shooter 'knew exactly what they were
doing,' sheriff says
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[December 06, 2022]
By Sharon Bernstein
(Reuters) -The orchestrator of gunfire attacks on power stations in
North Carolina that left nearly an entire county without electricity for
a second straight day knew "exactly" how to disable the stations,
sheriff Ronnie Fields said on Monday.
Fields' comments came as North Carolina Governor Roy Cooper warned of a
"new level of threat" posed by the incident and called for hardening of
critical infrastructure including the power grid.
“Protecting critical infrastructure like our power system must be a top
priority,” said Cooper, a Democrat, in a press briefing on Monday.
"These kinds of things cannot happen."
Asked if the attack was being investigated as an act of domestic
terrorism, Cooper said only that "investigators are leaving no stone
unturned."
Schools in Moore County will be closed for a second day on Tuesday and
38,000 households were still without power amid freezing nighttime
temperatures after the Saturday shootings.
Utility workers investigating the outages found gates broken and
evidence of gunfire damage to equipment at two substations in Moore
County, an area popular with tourists and known for golf resorts
including Pinehurst, which has hosted the U.S. Open and Ryder Cup
tournaments.
Authorities are keeping details of the investigation close to the vest,
saying only that the damage was done by firearms. However, Fields on
Monday indicated that whoever orchestrated the attacks knew how to take
out the substations.
The saboteur "knew exactly what they were doing to cause the damage and
cause the outage that they did," Fields said.
Federal agencies including the FBI and the U.S. Department of Energy are
investigating the shootings, along with local and state law enforcement.
So far, none have suggested a motive and no arrests have been announced.
U.S. President Joe Biden was briefed on the incidents, the White House
said on Monday.
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Duke Energy workers inspect what they
said was one of three bullet holes that crippled an electrical
substation after the Moore County Sheriff said that vandalism caused
a mass power outage, in Carthage, North Carolina, U.S. December 4,
2022. REUTERS/Jonathan Drake
"Early evidence suggests that it was deliberate and the
investigation is under way," Department of Homeland Security
Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas said in a briefing.
On Sunday, Fields said law enforcement had not found evidence to
support online speculation that the attacks were a protest against a
planned drag show set for Saturday. Organizers of the show at the
Sunrise Theater in Southern Pines said that far-right activists had
been trying to shut down the show for weeks, the Fayetteville
Observer reported, citing the theater's executive director, Kevin
Dietzel.
The newspaper reported that the show was held on Saturday despite
the power outages.
Duke Energy, which provides power to the area, said it had restored
electricity to about 7,000 customers by Monday afternoon, from a
total of 45,000 who had lost power after the shootings. That is
nearly everyone who the company serves in Moore County, spokesperson
Jeff Brooks said at a press briefing on Monday.
Brooks said that for most customers, power would likely be out
through Wednesday or Thursday, because the damage to the two
substations was extensive, and requires complicated parts and
repairs.
He said the difference between the needed repairs and a simple
blackout repair was like comparing the need to change a lightbulb to
the need to replace the entire heating and air conditioning system
of a house.
"We are restoring customers where possible, but the damage is beyond
repair in some areas," Jason Hollifield, Duke Energy’s general
manager of emergency preparedness, said in a statement on Monday.
"That leaves us with no option but to replace large pieces of
equipment – which is not an easy or quick task.”
(Reporting by Sharon Bernstein in Sacramento, California; Editing by
Lisa Shumaker and Stephen Coates)
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