My Illinois PE license has expired, and I have no plans to renew it. So I can?t give you the letter you need. But I can say that,
(1) If a 345 line fell onto a person, that person would die,
(2) If a 345 line fell onto a concrete wall, the wall could become part of a current path that would bring fault current back to the source, and a person standing on or near the wall might get a fatal shock, and
(3) No amount of grounding or bonding would have any impact whatsoever on the nature of risk to any person standing on or near that wall.
Current does not seek a path to ground (i.e., to planet Earth). It seeks a path back to its source. So if you bond all steel support poles to each other, and run a bond wire back to the substation from which the 345 line originates, then that wire might help carry fault current back to the source. But given the total impracticality of such a plan, there is no remaining value in bonding the poles to each other, or in improving the connections between the poles and the nearby dirt.
As I am sure any engineer who works with transmission systems would tell you, if there is a downed power line, be somewhere else.