Upon arrival, they saw the guy who climbed 150 feet to the top of the tower, brandishing a Bible and shouting “I’ve got a job to do, I’ve got to finish my job!” The person kept mentioning God and urging the first responders and T-Mobile techs to climb up and “see the view with me.”
He started throwing objects he detached from the tower down at the authorities who had gathered around to convince him to descend. The man wasn’t complying with the police, so it had to shut the tower area down for traffic, causing delivery disruptions for the surrounding businesses.
The way that he removed power supply clamps from the tower, avoiding touching the hot boxes, showed T-Mobile technicians that he might have had some knowledge or experience with the tower operations already. At the time, T-Mobile immediately issued a statement about the ongoing incident:
After our systems alerted us that there was a service issue at this site, which we and other providers lease from a vendor, our field technician responded, determined that there was an unauthorized entry, and called local authorities. We are grateful to the Miami Police Department and Miami Fire Rescue for their response and will continue to support their investigation. Fortunately, everyone is safe and overlapping coverage in the area will continue to ensure customers remain connected.
The police negotiation team spent the best part of four hours convincing Smith to come down, and he eventually agreed, got to the ground and actually thanked the first responders for their efforts to resolve the ordeal. He was charged with criminal mischief and a burglary of an occupied structure, which carried a fine of a thousand dollars.