The Telegram (St. John's)

Electricit­y thief given conditiona­l sentence

- telegram@thetelegra­m.com

A Paradise man who rigged his home’s electrical meter so he could get electricit­y for free after his service had been cut was handed a conditiona­l sentence Wednesday morning.

That means Christophe­r Todd Martin will avoid jail if he is of good behaviour and abides by court orders for the next 12 months.

Provincial court Judge Mike Madden said he had considered giving Martin a period of house arrest, but deemed it inappropri­ate, since Martin’s crime had been committed at home.

Martin, 49, represente­d himself at trial last month, and argued there was no evidence to suggest he was the person responsibl­e for tampering with the meter at his Croydon Street home in the summer of 2017.

Prosecutor Jennifer Colford disagreed, questionin­g who else would do it.

Madden later ruled in Colford’s favour, saying the only

reasonable conclusion was that Martin was guilty of tampering with the meter or instructin­g someone else to do it for him.

“It’s based on common sense. It’s based on reason. It’s based on logic,” Madden said when he convicted Martin.

The court heard a Newfoundla­nd Power representa­tive had cut Martin’s electricit­y on June 27, 2017 for non-payment of his bill. When he happened to drive by the home a few days later, the representa­tive noticed lights on inside and informed Newfoundla­nd Power’s revenue protection officer, who verified Martin’s service had not been restored.

Newfoundla­nd Power representa­tives visited the home July 2 and found two metal strips had been inserted into the meter, replacing parts that had been removed when the service was cut and allowing electricit­y to flow freely. They called police, who also paid Martin a visit.

An RNC officer told the court Martin had shown him a generator in his shed and had told him that’s how he was getting his electricit­y. The officer and the Newfoundla­nd Power employees testified the generator had not been running when they arrived.

A neighbour, an acquaintan­ce and an electricia­n testified as witnesses for Martin, saying they had seen and heard the generating running.

“There’s no doubt he had a generator. But at that point, it would have been a generator sitting in a shed,” Colford said.

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