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- From thompsol Fri Apr 28 09:50:10 1989
- Return-Path: <thompsol>
- Date: Fri, 28 Apr 89 09:50:08 BST
- From: thompsol@p4.cs.man.ac.uk
- Message-Id: <8904280850.AA01377@p3d.cs.man.ac.uk>
- To: mehrar
- Subject: mailout
- Status: RO
-
- Hello, I was just clearing out my mailin and mailout filesa when
- I noticed
- 22 To csttrgk@uk.ac.warwick.cu Tue Apr 4 15:35
- 23 To csttrgk@uk.ac.warwick .....
- 24 To csttrgk .....
- even though I was in Wolverhampton at the time.
- I thought to myself, I have not mailed to martin for years.
- On further examination I found these files to be
- cloak, crash, and my password checker.
- What, I wonder, is the explanation for this ?
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Hi Lloyd, this is all I've seen on the bank robberies, I'm pretty sure
- its all thats been posted.
-
- -Martin
-
-
-
- RULES FOR BANK ROBBERS
-
- According to the FBI, most modern-day bank robberies are "unsophisticated
- and unprofessional crimes," comitted by young male repeat offenders who
- apparently don't know the first thing about their business. This information
- was included in an interesting, amusing article titles "How Not to Rob a Bank,"
- by Tim Clark, which appeared in the 1987 edition of The Old Farmers Almanac.
-
- Clark reported that in spite of the widespread use of surveillance cameras,
- 76 percent of bank robbers use no disquise, 86 percent never study the bank
- before robbing it, and 95 percent make no long-range plans for concealing the
- loot. Thus, he offered this advice to would-be bank robbers, along with
- examples of what can happen if the rules aren't followed:
-
- 1. Pick the right bank. Clark advises that you don't follow the lead of the
- fellow in Anaheim, Cal., who tried to hold up a bank that was no longer in
- business and had no money. On the other hand, you don't want to be too
- familiar with the bank. A California robber ran into his mother while making
- his getaway. She turned him in.
-
- 2. Approach the right teller. Granted, Clark says, this is harder to plan.
- One teller in Springfield, Mass., followed the holdup man out of the bank and
- down the street until she saw him go into a restaurant. She hailed a passing
- police car, and the police picked him up. Another teller was given a holdup
- note by a robber, and her father, who was next in line, wrestled the man to the
- ground and sat on him until authorities arrived.
-
- 3. Don't sign your demand note. Demand notes have been written on the back
- of a subpoena issued in the name of a bank robber in Pittsburgh, on an envelope
- bearing the name and address of another in Detriot, and in East Hartford,
- Conn., on the back of a withdrawal slip giving the robber's signature and
- account number.
-
- 4. Beware of dangerous vegetables. A man in White Plains, N.Y., tried to
- hold up a bank with a zucchini. The police captured him at his house, where he
- showed them his "weapon."
-
- 5. Avoid being fussy. A robber in Panorama City, Cal., gave a teller a note
- saying, "I have a gun. Give me all your twenties in this envelope." The
- teller said, "All I've got is two twenties." The robber took them and left.
-
- 6. Don't advertise. A holdup man thought that if he smeared mercury ointment
- on his face, it would make him invisible to the cameras. Actually, it
- accentuated his features, giving authorities a much clearer picture. Bank
- robbers in Minnesota and California tried to create a diversion by throwing
- stolen money out of the windows of their cars. They succeeded only in drawing
- attention to themselves.
-
- 7. Take right turns only. Avoid the sad fate of the thieves in Florida who
- took a wrong turn and ended up on the Homestead Air Force Base. They drove up
- to a military police guardhouse and, thinking it was a toolbooth, offered the
- security men money.
-
- 8. Provide your own transportation. It is not clever to borrow the teller's
- car, which she carefully described to police. This resulted in the most
- quickly solved bank robbery in the history of Pittsfield, Mass.
-
- 9. Don't be too sensitive. In these days of exploding dye packs, stuffing
- the cash into your pants can lead to embarrassing stains, Clark points out,
- not to mention severe burns in sensitive places--as bandits in San Diego and
- Boston painfully discovered.
-
- 10. Consider another line of work. One nervous Newport, R.I., robber, while
- trying to stuff his ill-gotten gains into his shirt pocket, shot himself in
- the head and died instantly. Then there was the case of the hopeful criminal
- in Swansea, Mass., who, when the teller told him she had no money, fainted.
- He was still unconscious when the police arrived.
-
- In view of such ineptitude, it is not surprising that in 1978 and 1979, for
- example, federal and state officers made arrests in 69 percent of the bank
- holdups reported.
-
- 11. Be prepared to back up any threat. One would-be robber went into a bank
- armed only with a finger in his pocket, which he tried to pretend was a gun.
- Upon receiving the typically tactful note - "Hand over the money or I blow
- you away" - the teller said, "I'm sorry sir. I'm afraid I'll have to see your
- gun". The felon turned round and walked out.
-
- There were a couple of ridiculously inept bank robberies in Scotland a few
- years ago. In one, the robber used his bicycle as a getaway vehicle! A
- man in the street was given a bag of money for holding the bike steady as
- the robber tried to mount it with the cash in his hands. The robber
- hadn't worked out how to ride a bike when both hands held bags of
- money...
-
- The other I recall was even worse. The robber asked the cashier for
- #5,000. The cashier started laughing. (I don't know if this was from
- fear or if the cashier felt this was a joke.) The robber then asked for
- #500. The laughing increased. He then asked for #50. Even more laughter.
- By the time the robber had got down to asking for 50p, the cashier was
- laughing uncontrollably. The robber then climbed on to the counter and
- tried to vault over the bullet-proof glass. He fell flat on the floor.
- At this, he decided to get out of the bank. He tried to leave using the
- revolving door, but pushed it in the wrong direction, so it stuck. He was
- still pushing it in the wrong direction by the time the bank staff realised
- that the robbery was for real and got out from behind the counter to make
- an arrest.
-
- Another inept bank robbery I heard about in Pittsburgh: one Friday an old man
- held up the branch he'd used for most of his life, without using any kind of
- disguise. The following Monday he went back to deposit the haul into his
- account, with the notes still in the bank's wrappers.
-
- 12) Come prepared. One day, a robber handed a note to a cashier
- saying "Put $5,000 into a paper bag and don't say anything." The teller took
- the note and wrote on the back,"I don't have a paper bag."
- The robber fled.
-
-
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