Tower Climber Falls Dies, A man was apparently electrocuted when he 
climbed a 200-foot tower, touched a high-voltage power line and fell to a
 platform where his body was recovered by a Seattle Fire Department 
team.
Firefighters found a cap and a cell phone next to the body 
but nothing to indicate why he climbed the tower early Friday, said 
department spokesman Kyle Moore.
There was no one at the scene who said they knew 
the man, Moore said. The King County medical examiner's office took the 
body to determine his identification and cause of death.
"We 
don't know why he climbed the tower," said police spokesman Renee Witt. 
"There's nothing to indicate it was something other than an accidental 
death from trespassing."
The fire department initially received a
 report about 12:30 a.m. Friday of what appeared to be a transformer 
fire on the tower that carries 120,000-volt lines across the Lake 
Washington Ship Canal in the Fremont neighborhood.
It was followed by a report of witnesses seeing a flash of crackling sparks and a man falling.
Seattle
 City Light said it was too dangerous for firefighters to rush up the 
tower, Moore said. They were able to call in a Snohomish County 
helicopter for assistance. It spotted the body on the platform with no 
signs of life.
City Light turned off the power through the lines 
so a fire department technical rescue team could climb up and recover 
the body from the platform about 150 feet off the ground. The body was 
lowered to the ground before 7 a.m. in a basket.
The utility was 
able to switch electricity so only one customer was out of service 
during the recovery, said spokesman Peter Clarke.
It was the 
first such mishap Clarke could recall in his 13 years with the city 
utility. It would be possible for a "very determined" person to climb 
the lattice of metal in one of the tower legs, he said.
"We're going to be reviewing that to see if we can make it less easy," Clarke said.
