/ 23 February 2006

Hunt for gang who pulled off record British heist

The manhunt was under way on Thursday for an armed gang who disguised themselves as police officers and stole what could be a record £40-million from a security depot in southeast England after abducting its manager and his family.

Police said the perpetrators were ”highly sophisticated” and had planned their audacious raid in detail, subjecting their hostages to a ”terrifying ordeal”.

The Bank of England said that at least £25-million ($44-million) had been taken.

But unconfirmed reports said that the final figure could be up to £40-million — which would make it, by far, the biggest cash heist in British history.

The manager of the Securitas main cash depot in Tonbridge, southeast of London, was pulled over while driving on Tuesday evening by what he believed was an unmarked police car, Kent Police said.

They said a man wearing a high visibility jacket and a police-style hat got out of the vehicle, which had flashing blue lights on it.

The manager, believing they were genuine police officers, got into their car, was handcuffed, threatened at gunpoint and told to cooperate or his family would be hurt.

Two other robbers disguised as police abducted his wife and son from their home, telling them the manager had been involved in an accident.

Six men, some armed with handguns, then threatened and tied up around 15 staff at the depot of Securitas, a company providing security guards, alarm systems, and cash transportation services.

The gang loaded the stolen money into a large white delivery van before driving off in the early hours of Wednesday.

The shocked but uninjured staff activated an alarm around an hour later. The manager, his wife and son were also unhurt.

”They have all coped extremely well in the circumstances,” said detective superintendent Paul Gladstone of Kent Police.

”They were threatened with extreme violence by the gang and underwent a terrifying ordeal.”

”This gang were highly sophisticated and organised. They are not amateurs. This was a clearly a robbery that was planned in detail over time — someone must have information that will help us.”

An equally daring raid at the Belfast headquarters of the Northern Bank in December 2004 netted £26,5-million, making it the biggest cash theft in British and Irish history at that time.

The Daily Mail newspaper said on Thursday that closed-circuit television footage from the Channel Tunnel in Kent was being checked to see if the gang fled to France.

A former senior Kent Police officer, who did not want to be named, was quoted as saying that the gang might have had no idea they would net so much cash in used notes and bitten off more than they can chew.

”It will very quickly become apparent to the gang that it is so much it will cause them problems,” he said.

”The case will be so high-profile that it will be impossible for them to spend any of the money.”

The Bank of England said that its governor had asked on Wednesday for a review of the security arrangements for the storage of banknotes.

”There is no cost at all to the Bank [of England] or the taxpayer” resulting from the heist, said a spokesperson for the central bank.

”We have already been reimbursed by Securitas for the initial estimate of £25-million and any further sum will be reimbursed to the bank as soon as the amount is known,” she said.

Securitas in turn is to claim the amount from its insurers.

The Guardian newspaper said on Thursday it was thought that the gang may have been aware that February is the month when the greatest amount of money is taken out of circulation and held briefly in storage. – AFP

 

AFP