Before moving away in the middle of the wave of theft theft, intermittent thief saws from the cables in the electric vehicle charging station

A careless thief he saw from cables at the electric vehicle charging station was caught by CCTV.
The man who was not detected, immediately after 20.30 on March 12 at 20.30 Decathlon Gallagher Retail Park cut the thick cables at the home charging center and risk death with electric shock.
Dramatic images show that the bandit hacked towards cables before missing the camera.
At some point, while being cut, the man is trying to discover that he was pulled by a CCTV camera on his head and leaves a worried statement on his open face.
He’s constantly looking around to check that he was watching anyone’s guilt, but he wore nothing but a baseball hat to hide his identity.
Since theft took place, the national electric vehicle charging network Be.ev put 40-50 ‘sought’ posters in the region to catch the thief.
The poster shows a screenshot of the robber’s face while realizing that he was withdrawn and said, ‘Do you know this man?’
A statement about the poster explains: ‘This bandit means that the stupidity of stealing copper cables each worth £ 15 means that the drivers cannot charge their homes and that their actions are seriously damaged by the electric shock.’
A man (in the picture) stole his charging cables at the home charging center in Decathlon Gallagher Retail Park immediately after 20:30 on March 12th

National Electrical Vehicle Charging Network Be.ev put 40-50 ‘sought’ posters in the region to capture the thief
Under the poster, people are asked to apply to the West Midlands police for any information.
The cables will cost thousands of expensive for the replacement of Be.ev, but only 15 £ 15 in scrap.
Theft of home accusations is a major issue for the industry that cost thousands of pounds every year.
Experts warned that thieves are after the copper in the cables in a rapid and ultra -detained charger in a guilt dating back to November 2023.
Apparently, thieves seem to cut their copper cables to illegal scrap sellers or in places like Facebook Marketplace and Ebay to cut charging cables to draw and sell.
However, even though the price of copper is attractive, cable cables are not worth it that Vandals can imagine.
Last month, Britain’s largest and ‘most advanced’ electric vehicle (home) charging station opened its doors in Hampshire.
Located near the A34 and the intersection of the M3, Instavolt Superhub has 44 charging points that promises to return you to full capacity in just 20 minutes.
According to Instavolt’s CEO Delvin Lane, despite concerns about reducing demand for environmentally friendly vehicles, the large facility aims to reliability ‘industry leader’.

The man is constantly looking around to check that no one is watching the guilt, but he didn’t wear anything but a baseball hat to hide his identity

Thug ruthlessly hacked the cables before taking the camera out of sight

Located near the A34 and Junction 9 of the M3, the new Instavolt Superhub has a charging point that promises to return to full capacity in just 20 minutes.

Superhub has ‘Ultra-Rapid’ charger, which can provide power up to 160kW, which makes it one of the fastest charging stations in the country
Superhub has ‘Ultra Rapid’ charger, which can provide power up to 160kW, which makes it one of the fastest charging stations in the country.
In fact, a car like KIA EV6 or Polestar 3 can go from 10 percent to 80 percent in just 20 minutes.
Chargers cost users 85p per kilowatt – between 10p and 15p, the cost of charging at home.
Intense rates fall from 9 o’clock to 7 pm to 54P per kWh.
The station will also have a solar panel that uses renewable energy to provide power to charger, and a solar farm and the latest battery storage system.
While the 4MWH battery storage unit provides maximum efficiency, a mixture of solar energy, battery storage and grill power will ensure that the charger works at the most appropriate capacity.
Mailonline contacted West Midlands police for a comment.