Fogarty legislation would increase penalties for terrorist attacks on electric grid, cell phone towers
In the wake of several attacks on
transformer stations and cell phone towers around the nation, Rep. Kathleen A.
Fogarty (D-Dist. 35, South Kingstown) has introduced legislation that would
increase the criminal penalties on such attacks.David Horsey, Seattle Times
The House Judiciary Committee is scheduled Tuesday to
hear testimony on the bill (2023-H 5364), which would increase penalties
for damages to electric and cellular communication lines from $3,000 to
$50,000; imprisonment from two years to 10 years, or both and would require
restitution for economic harm. The meeting will take place Tuesday, Feb. 14, at
the rise of the House (about 4:30 p.m.) in Room 101 on the first floor of the
State House.
“Attacks against the electrical grid are at an all-time high nationwide,” said Representative Fogarty. “Neo-Nazis, white supremacists and other right-wing groups are planning and executing these attacks, as well as encouraging others to do the same in an effort to destroy the communications infrastructure and hasten the demise of the federal government.”
Last
December, a hailstorm of bullets struck a power station in North Carolina,
leaving tens of thousands without power. Four substations in the Pacific
Northwest were attacked in the past three months. In Kern County, in southern
California, someone fired a gun into a PG&E substation last July, leaving
1,100 customers without power and causing $3 million to $5 million in damage.
According
to Department of Energy statistics, human attacks were responsible for 171
“electric disturbance incidents” around the country in 2022, compared with 99
in 2021.
“Domestic
terrorism is evolving, and we need to take action to make an attack on our
infrastructure an unpopular crime,” said Representative Fogarty. “These so
called ‘accelerationist’ groups theorize that chaos and destabilizing violence
will bring about societal collapse and cause a race war; and they consider
these substations to be easy targets, since many of them are remote and
unguarded.”
Electrical
substations transform high-voltage electricity to the lower voltages that power
our homes. Damaging even a single substation can shut off critical services to
thousands of people.
The
legislation would also increase imprisonment for damage resulting from
contamination of public water supply systems from five to 10 years and require
restitution for economic harm.
The bill is cosponsored by Representatives Katherine S.
Kazarian (D-Dist. 63, East Providence, Pawtucket), Lauren H. Carson (D-Dist.
75, Newport), Teresa Tanzi (D-Dist. 34 South Kingstown, Narragansett), Raymond
A. Hull (D-Dist. 6 Providence, North Providence), Justine A. Caldwell (D-Dist.
30, East Greenwich, West Greenwich) and Arthur Handy (D-Dist. 18,
Cranston).