LONDON, Aug. 20 (UPI) -- London taxpayers will pay more than $8,200 for the trial of a filmmaker accused of stealing less than a penny's worth of electricity, a magistrates' court said.
Mark Guard, 44, appeared at two separate hearings in North London before the charge was dropped and the cost of the proceedings added up to $8,200, The Daily Mail reported.
Guard was making a documentary about crime and the homeless. He filmed squatters entering an empty building through an open window Aug. 1. A movement sensor in the building was triggered. When the squatters fled, Guard, a former electrician, decided to remain and turn off the alarm because the noise would disturb neighboring families.
To see the alarm switch, Guard had to turn on the electricity in the building for a few seconds.
When police arrived he told them what he had done and was arrested for stealing the electricity.
He offered to pay for the electricity, but the electric company wouldn't bother collecting such a tiny sum, the report said.
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