Local officials say the theft spree is actively endangering lives, as firefighters may arrive at a fire scene and find no working hydrant within range.

Executive Fire Commissioner Chuck Simms said, “One hydrant here or there is manageable, but the problem is whoever’s doing this is doing multiple hydrants in a row. So when DFD shows up, they’re not going to have a hydrant within 600 or 900 feet, which puts people’s lives at risk.”

Each stolen hydrant part is worth roughly $600 on the scrap market, meaning the thieves could have pocketed tens of thousands of dollars in just two days while destroying the city’s emergency water supply infrastructure.

Detroit fire officials are now urgently contacting local scrapyards and urging them not to accept fire hydrant parts.

The city is also asking the public for help identifying the suspects, as the thefts have occurred in clusters across multiple neighborhoods.

Commissioner Simms emphasized that this is not a minor vandalism problem; it is a direct threat to public safety.

NEW: In just 48 hours, 75 fire hydrants in Detroit have been destroyed after thieves started stealing the metal nozzles and stems.

Local officials are now needing to tell scrapyards not to accept the stolen fire hydrant parts, which are worth about $600 each.

“One hydrant here…pic.twitter.com/xS442Li5U0

— Collin Rugg (@CollinRugg)April 23, 2026

Source: The Gateway Pundit