Should have seen this coming: [url=http://online.wsj.com/article/SB121132645628208717.html?mod=googlenews_wsj\%3Cbr%20/%3E]WSJ[/url]
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'A')s oil prices have soared to new highs, energy companies aren't the only ones scouring the earth for new sources of crude. Thieves are, too.
A sharp rise in oil-field thefts is driving oil companies and law enforcement to beef up security at wells that are being targeted more frequently as a source of easy money. Thieves are tapping into pipelines, paying off truck drivers and sometimes simply driving up to wells in tanker trucks and pumping the oil out of storage containers.
Wayne Wicks, a Houston-based private investigator who specializes in oil-field crimes, has seen his caseload increase fivefold in the past two years. "It's hundreds of thousands of gallons of crude," said Mr. Wicks. And that is translating into millions of dollars in losses hitting both big producers and tiny independents.
Some companies are taking extra measures to fight back. In the past year, Devon Energy Corp., for one, has installed cameras at many well sites to broadcast images back to the company's Oklahoma City headquarters. It has held training sessions for local sheriffs' departments to help them identify oil-field equipment, and it has hired extra security to patrol its wells. The reason: a rash of thefts that included the loss of 600 barrels of oil in a single night, according to the company.









