jesusfuckingchrist!!



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Armed gang steals up to £40m after depot chief is
abducted 

By Geneviève Roberts 
Published: 23 February 2006 



An armed gang posed as policemen to abduct a security
manager and his family before stealing up to £40m in
one of Britain's biggest robberies. 

A gang of at least six people tied up 15 members of
staff at the Securitas depot in Tonbridge, Kent,
before making off with the cash. 

The highly orchestrated raid involved the synchronised
kidnaps of the depot manager and of his young son and
wife, who was told that her husband had been injured
in a car accident in order to leave her home in Herne
Bay, Kent. 

Robbers threatened the manager at gunpoint and forced
him to help them gain access to the cash at the depot,
enabling them to pull off the crime which police have
said was "planned in detail over time". 

Within hours of the theft, the Bank of England had
been alerted that the cash, which was due to be
distributed to banking customers around south-east
England, had been stolen. Senior Government ministers
were also told of the theft. The Bank confirmed last
night that Securitas has reimbursed them with an
initial £25m and will reimburse the exact amount
stolen once a full audit has been conducted. 

Unconfirmed reports suggest that up to £40m was taken,
making the robbery Britain's biggest ever cash heist,
dwarfing the £26.5m raid on the Belfast's Northern
Bank in December 2004. The Bank of England is
reviewing its security arrangements for storage of
banknotes as a result. 

As forensic officers examined the scene last night,
details of the meticulously planned kidnaps that
enabled the robbery to take place emerged. On Tuesday
evening, while his wife and son were being abducted
from their home, the manager of Securitas' main cash
depot south of the Thames was pulled over in his car
near Maidstone, by what he believed was an unmarked
police car. 

A man wearing a high-visibility jacket and
"police-style" hat got out of the vehicle, which had
blue lights in the radiator grill, and spoke to him.
The manager, believing the men to be officers, got
into their car and was handcuffed. 

The manager was then driven in the car, which may have
been a Volvo or similar vehicle, westbound along the
M20 on to the West Malling bypass, where he was tied
up and put into a white van. At an unknown location,
gang members threatened the manager at gunpoint and
told him to "co-operate or his family would be at
risk", a Kent police spokesman said. 

He was forced to help the armed robbers gain access
the guarded site and the cash stored at the Vale Road
depot, one of 11 cash management centres run by
Securitas. At 1am yesterday morning, at least six men
wearing balaclavas, some armed with handguns,
threatened and tied up about 15 members of staff. The
gang spent the next hour loading the cash into a
7.5-tonne white lorry, before driving off at about
2.15am. 

Kent police were alerted to the crime when the
shocked, but unhurt, staff activated an alarm. The
manager, his wife and son were also uninjured. 

Detective Superintendent Paul Gladstone of Kent
police's serious and organised crime unit said: "This
was a traumatic ordeal for the manager of the security
depot, his family and all of the staff who worked
there. They have all coped extremely well in the
circumstances, when faced with threats and a gang of
armed men. 

"It is vitally important that we hear from people who
may have seen something suspicious or someone acting
oddly either round the depot in Vale Road, or in any
of the locations where this gang was operating in the
time up to the robbery. 

"This was clearly a robbery that was planned in
detail. Someone must have information that will help
us in the hunt for the robbers. A very substantial sum
of money running into millions of pounds has been
stolen and we are determined to bring the robbers to
justice." 

A Securitas spokesman said: "Clearly our thoughts go
out to everyone who has been affected by this. It's a
terrible thing for anyone to have to go through. We
are particularly pleased, if that's the right
expression, that no one has been hurt." 

A Bank of England spokeswoman said: "The Bank is
working closely with Securitas and the police. The
Bank is relieved that the staff of SCM (Securitas Cash
Management Ltd) are now safe and unharmed. There is no
cost at all to the Bank or the taxpayer." 

In December 2004, in a robbery which also involved the
kidnap of relatives of staff to secure vast sums of
cash, £26.5m was taken from the Belfast headquarters
of the Northern Bank. Almost none of the cash has been
recovered, although some cash seized in County Cork
last year was linked to the robbery. 

Steve Park, who runs a security consultancy firm, said
that the gang had detailed knowledge of their target.
"They would not be planning this crime unless they
knew this money would be there. One suspects that this
money is going to leave the country in smaller
bundles. The notes will be numbered, I am surprised
they have not already been rendered useless," he told
Sky News. He said that the perpetrators will need an
"even bigger plan" to get rid of such a vast quantity
of cash due to the high-profile nature of the crime. 

Police officers are appealing for information from
anyone who saw: 

* The manager's silver Nissan Almera car being stopped
on the A249 northbound, just past the Three Squirrels
public house. 

* A Volvo or similar car meeting with a white van. 

* A white 7.5 ton truck in the Tonbridge area in the
early hours of this morning. 

Kent police urged anyone with information to telephone
their special incident room on 01622 652 361 or 652
366 




The biggest robberies 
CITY OF LONDON, 1990 

Global banks were hit when at least £292m in bearer
bonds and financial documents was stolen. Kenneth
Cheeseman was convicted in New York of
money-laundering and sentenced to six and a half years
in jail. The masterminds escaped. 

KNIGHTSBRIDGE, July 1987 

Raiders broke into a safe deposit box centre in London
and stole cash, jewellery and other contents worth
over £30m. The mastermind, Valerio Viccei, was jailed.


BRINK'S-MAT, November 1983 

More than 6,800 bars of gold, worth £26m, were seized
by an armed gang from awarehouse near Heathrow
airport. Little of the bullion was recovered. Only
three of the six gang members have been convicted. 

GREAT TRAIN ROBBERY, August 1963 

The gang netted £2.6m in used bank notes from a mail
train near Cheddington, Bedfordshire. One by one the
gang were captured and convicted. 

NORTHERN BANK, December 2004 

The £26.5m robbery, allegedly carried out by the IRA,
is claimed to be Britain's biggest bank raid. Four
people alleged to be connected with the raid are
awaiting trial. 

Oliver Duff 





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