Nothing screams “crime” like the good old-fashioned bank
heist. Whether carried out by petty thieves or sophisticated crime rings, in
movies or in our own towns, bank robbery has captivated us for centuries. Of
course, the most compelling bank robbery stories involve elaborate schemes and
eye-popping sums of money being looted from the vault. So today, we will
remember the heart-pounding details of 15 of the biggest bank heists ever.
Butch Cassidy, 1889,
$20,000 stolen
Butch Cassidy’s run-ins with the law were not limited to
bank robbery. Throughout his career Cassidy made headlines for looting trains
and ranches along a carefully constructed web of hideouts known as the Outlaw
Trail. His biggest bank heist, however, was on June 24, 1889 at the San Miguel
Valley Bank in Telluride. Arriving with three armed cowboys, Cassidy and co.
made off with $20,000 in stolen loot.It was this robbery that propelled Cassidy
to become the well-known criminal who established one of the best hideouts
(Wyoming’s “Hole in the Wall”) and ultimately obtained legend status.
Bonnie and Clyde,
1930-1934, $ stolen unknown
Arguably the most famous (and infamous) bank robbers in
history, there is no definitive tally of exactly how much Bonnie Parker and
Clyde Barrow stole. What we do know is that, in the words of the FBI, the
Barrow gang carried out a “violent crime spree across the Midwest that included
auto theft, bank robbery, theft from the federal government, and the murder of
more than a dozen people, including many law enforcement officers.” Following a string of bank, gas station, and
convenience store robberies that inspired a hit 1967 film about the duo, Bonnie
and Clyde were famously gunned down by police officers in a planned ambush in
Louisiana on May 23 1934, described by the FBI as “one of the most colorful and
spectacular manhunts the nation has seen.”
John Dillinger, 1933,
$76,000 stolen
The quintessential Depression-era bank robber, John
Dillinger swiped several hundred thousand dollars from banks from 1933-1934. He
is perhaps best known for his elaborate social engineering schemes, which
ranged from posing as a salesman of bank alarm systems and pretending to be
filming a “bank robbery scene” for a movie in order to stake out future heist
locations. (These and similar antics of Dillinger’s inspired the hit movie
Public Enemies.) Financially, Dillinger’s biggest robbery took place at the
Central Nation Bank and Trust Company of Greencastle, Indiana, where he flew
the coop with over $75,000 in stolen cash. This and other robberies are
described in detail by the FBI’s famous cases files, which recall that
Dillinger and his gang, “…stirred mass emotion to a degree rarely seen in this
country.”
Palestine Liberation
Organization, 1976, $20-$50 million stolen
MentalFloss.com tells the story of how Palestinian
guerrillas famously knocked off the British Bank of the Middle East in
Beirut. In 1976, a PLO-affiliated group,
“…blasted through the wall of a Catholic church next door to the bank,” in order
to get access. With that accomplished, a squad of safe-crackers was dispatched
to open the vault, allowing the PLO to load trucks with anywhere from $20-$50
million in jewels, gold, stocks and bonds over the next two days. The culprits
were never caught, though much of the stolen stock and bond money was
recovered.
Stanley Mark Rifkin,
1978, $10.8 million stolen
Written of by TIME Magazine as “the ultimate heist”, Stanley
Rifkin’s 1978 looting of Security Pacific National bank once stood as the
biggest US bank robbery in history. Given the mind-blowing magnitude of the
theft (over $10 million stolen), one might imagine a high degree of preparation
and sophistication. Indeed, this is exactly what TIME found in their reporting:
“The 55-floor
Security Pacific National Bank headquarters in Los Angeles looks like a
granite-and-glass fortress. Dark-suited guards roam the lobby. Hidden cameras
photograph customers as they make deposits and withdrawals. Yet last month,
this stronghold was the site of a $10.2 million heist, the largest bank robbery
in U.S. history. There were no guns, no masks, no getaway cars; indeed, the FBI
reports that the Stanley Mark Rifkin thief never touched the money. The robber
was so clever that the bank did not realize it had been robbed until told so by
the FBI eight days afterward.”
Despite the smooth execution (which included multi-million
dollar wire transfers to Swiss bank accounts and enough social engineering to
make any spy-buff perk up), Rifkin was eventually tipped off to the FBI by an
disloyal business associate.
Manuel Delgado, 1980,
$20,000 stolen
In a carefully devised plan reproduced by RCDSA.com, Manuel
Delgado and four partners swindled $20,000 out of Norco, California’s Security
Pacific Bank. A major shootout ensued between the robbers and Riverside County
Sherrif’s Deputy Glyn Bolasky following their exit from the bank, spanning a
prolonged chase in which hundreds of rounds were fired. When it was all said
and done, Delgado and his goons damaged 33 police vehicles (including a police
helicopter that was forced to land rather than keep pursuit) and reported upon
capture that they were, “…prepared to fight to the death.”
Larry Eugene Phillips, Jr. and Emil Matasareanu, 1997,
$303,305 stolen
While not as financially draining as the above robberies,
the unforgettable North Hollywood Shootout remains one of the most heinous and
talked-about bank robberies ever. After several prior robberies, partners in
crime Larry Eugene Phillips, Jr. and Emil Matasareanu strapped up with five
illegally modified assault rifles, two pistols and over 3,300 rounds of
armor-piercing ammunition for a scrupulously planned raid on the Laurel Canyon
Blvd. Bank of America. The plan was spoiled when the nefarious duo were spotted
entering the police, leading to, in the words of Emergency.com, “one of the
fierciest shootouts in U.S. history.” Phillips and Matasereaunu were only able
to cop up on $305,305 but succeeded in wreaking unimaginable carnage on the
surrounding area in a gunfight that was captured from beginning to end on
video. Standing their ground with dauntless audacity, the criminals (fortified
with metal trauma plates and nerve-calming medication) returned fire with the
LAPD until Phillips committed suicide and Matasereaunu succumbed to his wounds,
after his capture. The shootout is a major reason why police are now routinely
equipped with AR-15 rifles that pierce trauma plates.
Allen Pace, 1997,
$18.9 million stolen
Allen Pace is the criminal mastermind behind the infamous
Dunbar Armored Heist, said to be the largest cash robbery in US history. It was
an inside job of epic proportions, as Pace (in his capacity as regional safety
inspector) took meticulous photographs of Dunbar’s Los Angeles armored car
depot, returned with friends, and skillfully dodged security cameras en route
to tying up guards with duct tape and making off with $18.9 million in a rented
U-Haul. It was a high-tech affair according to StAugustine.com, who recalls
that Pace, “…drew a floor plan and provided radio headsets that allowed them
[Pace's partners] to talk to each other.” The crooks might have gotten away
with it were it not for a piece of the U-Haul’s tail light that police found at
the scene of the crime, leading them to Pace, who was sentenced to 17 years in
prison.
David Scott Ghannt,
1997, $17.3 million stolen
Many a bank heist take the form of the “inside job”, and the
Loomis Fargo robbery of 1997 is another memorable example. As armored car
driver and vault supervisor, David Scott Ghannt orchestrated a covert looting
of Loomis Fargo & Company in cahoots with Steve Chambers, the friend of a
fellow bank employee. The plan called for Ghannt to steal the money from the
vault in a one-night raid, after which he would flee to Mexico and have money
wired to him in incrementally by Chambers until it was safe to return for the
rest. And it worked – in one night, Ghannt loaded $17.3 million into a van,
kept $50,000 and escaped to Cozumel. (The thieves actually miscalculated how
tough it would be to transport all the cash and left over $3 million in the
van.) But it wasn’t long before Ghannt was apprehended by FBI agents and
Mexican police, leading to the capture of Chambers and the other
co-conspirators and the return of most of the money. The entire story is
chronicled in the book Heist! The $17 Million Loomis-Fargo Theft.
Ralph Guarino and
Salvatore Calciano, 1998, $1.8 million stolen
3,000 miles from Hollywood, former mob boss Ralph Guarino
hatched a plan to rob Bank of America’s World Trade Center branch. But he couldn’t
do it alone. With security stepped up at the WTC following the 1993 bombings,
Guarino persuaded a long-time employee of the facility (Salvatore Calciano) to
assist in the heist by handing over his ID badge. Calciano proceeded to inform
Guarino of when the next expected delivery of cash to the bank was, and three
hired goons were dispatched to carry out the robbery on that day. The three
entered the bank via passenger elevator early in the morning, tying up
employees and stuffing cash into duffel bags as planned. Luckily for law
enforcement, the goons were not very discreet and were identified rather
quickly following the robbery, leading to the capture of Guarino, who chose
becoming an FBI informant over jail time.
Qusay and Abid
al-Hamid Mahmood, 2003, $1 billion stolen
In what is now considered the largest bank heist in recorded
history, Saddam Hussein’s regime conducted a massive raid on Iraq’s central
bank, making off with roughly $1 billion .”…just hours before the US began
bombing Iraq”, according to CNN. Following eye-witness reports that several pulled up to the bank to have money
loaded inside, CNN quotes an anonymous bank official as saying that, “…Qusay
and Abid al-Hamid Mahmood, Saddam’s personal assistant, were involved in the
withdrawal from the Central Bank.” Huge sums of cash were found in key
locations soon after the unprecedented looting (including $650 million at one
of Saddam’s palaces) and it remains to be seen whether anyone will ever manage
to steal more. The heist is explained in detail in the 2003 book Made Men.
Security
guards, 2007, $300 million stolen
Iraq’s banks were far from safe following the Hussein-led
2003 raid. It was only four years later when security guards swiped some $300
million from Dar Es Salaam, a private bank in the Karrada district of Baghdad.
It was not a particularly sophisticated heist. According to Reuters, bank
employees arrived to work the next day and. “…found the front door open and the
money gone.” The guards responsible normally slept at the bank and used this as
cover to make off with the money. In addition to the $300 million USD, roughly
220 million Iraqi dinars (0r $176,000 US) were stolen by the guards, who have
yet to be captured since the 2007 robbery.
Jaison Babu, 2007, 80
million Rupees stolen
Rumored to have been inspired by the movie Dhoom, the 2007
South Malabar Grameen bank robbery stands as one of the biggest in India’s
history. With the help of three co-conspirators, the crime kingpin by the alias
of Jaison Babu cut a hole in the floor of the bank (which sat atop a
restaurant) in the wee hours of December 30, 2007. The conniving quartet
skipped town with 80 kilograms of solid gold and 2,500,000 rupees. But this was
no haphazard con. Babu and his gang orchestrated the heist by renting out the
restaurant in advance and announcing that it was closed for renovations until
January 8th, going so far as to buy new furniture for the restaurant and
construction materials to appear convincing. Unfortunately for them, phone
monitoring led authorities to the culprits and resulted in their arrest as well
as the return of more than 80% of the stolen funds.
Ren Xaiofeng and Ma
Xiangjing, 2007, 50 million yuan stolen ($6.7 million US)
Ren Xaiofeng and Ma Xiangjing used their positions as vault
managers to carry out what is now recognized as the largest bank robbery in
Chinese history. It was quite a strange series of heists however, not
possessing the cunning or tact discussed in the other examples. It all started
with Xaiofeng’s original heist of 200,000 yuan from the Agricultural Bank of
China, which he planned to repay by winning the lottery. This was not the
brightest strategy, but amazingly, he was able to repay 200,000 yuan to cover
this first theft. But this “success” served only to enflame his passions for
robbery, and with the aid of Xiangjing and two security guards, Ren proceeded
to steal 32 million yuan – again, spending nearly all of it on lottery tickets.
Lady luck wasn’t as forthcoming this time though, prompting the group to steal
another 18 million yuan soon thereafter for a last-ditch effort at striking it
big in lottery winnings. In their article Lottery Bank Robbers to be Executed
the UK’s Independent noted that the two, “…won prize money of just 98,000 yuan
in all and used that and the remaining 4m yuan to buy escape cars and fake ID
and flee,” before being caught and taken to trial for the string of robberies.
Unknown Irish
gangsters, 2009, $9 million
A $9 million robbery of the Bank of Ireland has resulted in
a massive manhunt for the perpetrators, according to Ireland’s Examiner. Said
to be the biggest such robbery in Ireland’s history, the heist was carried out
in a most violent manner, with employees being taken hostage by a group of
seven people believed to be mobsters from inner-city northern Dublin. Perhaps
no one suffered more during the robbery than 24 year old employee Shane
Travers, who was forced to drive to the bank in and load the money into his own
vehicle at gunpoint. The entire spectacle took no more than 15 minutes, which
has lead Irish authorities to question the state of that country’s bank security
practices.
Culled from billshrink.com
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