Maison DesChamps, a climber who goes by the social media handle “Pro-Life Spiderman,” was arrested in Phoenix, Arizona, on Tuesday after scaling the former Chase tower.
The 23-year-old DesChamps scaled the 40-story building on Tuesday morning, starting just before 10 a.m. MST and ending about an hour later. Videos taken of DesChamps during the climb showed that he used a stemming technique to ascend a three-foot-wide channel that runs up the 483-foot tower.
DesChamps ascended the building without ropes or protective equipment, in a risky style of climbing known as free soloing.
Keller said fire officials prepared to begin rescue operations and were in constant contact with DesChamps throughout his climb, asking him if he was fatigued or needed assistance. After he reached the top, police arrested DesChamps and booked him into jail on charges of trespassing and criminal nuisance.
On his website, DesChamps said he took on the dangerous stunt to raise funds for Let Them Live, a charity that provides financial support for women considering abortions due to financial hardships.
DesChamps said on the website, and reiterated in a video he took during the climb, that he is also raising funds for a pregnant woman named Hope, who has several health problems that she believes would severely limit her ability to care for her baby. DesChamps said because of those concerns, Hope “scheduled a late-term abortion on February 10th.”
Fire Official Condemns Stunt
Keller condemned DesChamps’ activist stunt, saying DesChamps wasn’t the only person endangered by the climb.“This is so dangerous. You put not only yourself in danger, you put firefighters in danger. You put anyone else walking below or anybody around this incident in danger,” Keller said. “This is an uncontrolled environment. This is Chase Tower; 40 floors up. Very, very dumb.”
DesChamps described his risk assessment on his website, saying that while he wouldn’t encourage people to climb without a rope, buildings are technically easier to climb than rocky cliffsides.
Not His First Arrest
Tuesday’s tower climb was not the first time DesChamps has scaled the side of a building without any safety equipment like ropes, carabiners, or the spring-loaded camming devices professional climbers often use to climb rock crags.DesChamps has documented other building climbs he has done, such as ascents of the New York Times building in New York City, and the Aria Hotel in Las Vegas.
“In most states and cities there are no laws against climbing skyscrapers,” DesChamps said on his website. “Usually, I am charged with some form of trespassing or disorderly conduct. However, after further review, my charges are either dropped or easily fought in court.”