Similar questions: infamous bank heists history.
See inside 1. ScreamEdvard Munch's famous painting, The Scream, was sensationally stolen twice from the National Gallery of Norway. In 1994 two men took just 50 seconds to climb a ladder, smash through a window of the Gallery and cut the painting from the wall with wire cutters.
A few months later the thieves offered the painting back in exchange for a $1 million ransom, but the offer was refused. Luckily a sting operation held in May 1994 successfully recovered the painting, and four men were convicted and sentenced for the theft in 1996. Ten years later, the painting was stolen again, this time alongside Munch's Madonna.
Two armed, masked robbers burst into the Oslo museum in August 2004, snatching the artworks from the walls as horrified tourists looked on. Police recovered the works in August 2006, but found they were scratched and torn and showed signs of damp. They have now been restored and are hanging back in the Gallery – where visitors are subjected to tighter security checks.2.
The biggest art heist in history? The culprits of this 1990 heist are still at large today. Just a few hours after Boston's St. Patrick's Day festivities ended, two men dressed as policemen knocked on a side door at the Isabella Gardner Museum in Boston, Massachusetts.
The guards let them in – only to then realise to their horror that these were not police officers, but art thieves. The guards were handcuffed, gagged and dragged into the basement while the thieves cut three Rembrandt's from their frames, as well as "The Concert" by Johannes Vermeer and "Landscape with an Obelisk" by Govert Flinck. In total they snatched 12 paintings worth an estimated £300 million – the paintings have never been found, and the museum never reimbursed.3.
America’s most notorious hijacker“D. B. Cooper” is still at large after 35 years of being on the run.
On November 24 1971 he hijacked Northwest Orient Airlines flight 305 with a briefcase "bomb. " He handed a flight attendant a note saying "I have a bomb in my briefcase. I will use it if necessary.
I want you to sit next to me. You are being hijacked. "The flight attendant alerted the pilot, who was instructed by radio control to comply with Cooper's requests, which were a parachute and $200,000.
Passengers were dropped off at the Seattle-Tacoma airport, in exchange for the parachute and cash. Loot in hand, Cooper instructed the pilot to take to the skies again, this time headed for Mexico. When Cooper jumped from the plane, it was flying through a heavy rainstorm with no light source coming from the ground due to cloud coverage.
Because of the poor visibility, his descent went unnoticed by the jet fighters tracking the airliner. He is believed to have landed around Ariel, Washington, although his precise landing zone remains unknown. The whereabouts of the man (or his remains) has been described as “one of the great crime mysteries of our time.”4.
The Great Train RobberyThis notorious robbery involved a 15-member gang, led by Bruce Reynolds and including Ronnie Biggs, who took £2.6 million from a Royal Mail train in Buckhamshire in 1963. The men brought the Glasgow to London mail train to a halt by tampering with the signals. They then swarmed onto the train, badly injuring the driver, and grabbed 120 mail bags containing used bank notes.
Most of the gang members were caught after police discovered their fingerprints at their hideout at Leatherslade Farm, near Oakley, Buckinghamshire. The robbers were tried, sentenced and imprisoned. Ronnie Biggs escaped from prison 15 months into his sentence and moved to Brazil – but he returned to the UK in 2001 to serve the remainder of his 30-year sentence.
Charlie Wilson also escaped prison and lived in a quiet suburban street in Canada – unfortunately for him, his wife made the mistake of telephoning his parents in England, enabling Scotland Yard to track him down.5. Brinks MatIn 1983 six robbers broke into the Brinks Mat warehouse at Heathrow Airport, England. They were going to steal £3 million in cash; but when they arrived they found ten tonnes of gold bullion, worth £26 million.
The gang got into the warehouse thanks to security guard Anthony Black, who was the brother-in-law of the raid's architect Brian Robinson. Scotland Yard quickly discovered the family connection and Black confessed to aiding and abetting the raiders, providing them with a key to the main door and giving them details of security measures. Robinson was sentenced to 25 years imprisonment for armed robbery; Black got six years, and served three.
Three tonnes of stolen gold has never been recovered. It is claimed that anyone wearing gold jewellery bought in the UK after 1983 is probably wearing Brinks Mat.6. Shergar“Shergar the wonder-horse”, who was worth around £10 million, was kidnapped from a stables owned by the Aga Khan in Ireland in 1983.
The theft came just before the breeding season, where Derby winner Shergar was due to mate with up to 55 mares. Shergar was never found and his kidnappers have never been officially identified – but most evidence points to the involvement of the IRA. The thieves demanded a ransom of £2 million, but the horses’ shareholders refused to pay.
Insurers also refused to pay out without evidence of the horse’s death. Sean O'Callaghan, a convicted murderer who turned into a supergrass against the IRA, wrote a book called The Informer in which he claims the horse died because its IRA captors could not handle the animal."To handle Shergar, the IRA recruited a man who had once 'worked with horses'. But working with horses is one thing: dealing with a thoroughbred stallion, which can be a difficult, highly-strung creature at the best of times, is another story altogether," he said.
He goes on to claim that the horse got out of control in its horsebox, injured itself and died within days.7. Bull semen…From prize horses to… bull semen. It may be unsavoury, but it is worth a lot of money.
In November 2005, a farmer at Stonewood Acres in Smithburg, Maryland returned to his farm to discover that a 70-pound tank filled with bull semen had been opened up, with sixty-five "straws" containing the sperm of nearly 50 bulls missing. The missing straws were worth about $75,000. The farmer, who had taken years to build up his supply, was planning on selling the semen at a cattle show.
“Frozen bull semen is big business because it saves on the transportation cost of putting a bull and a cow into the same pen to breed. Frozen semen can also last for many years, outliving the bull who produced it,” according to the Washington Post. The number of potential suspects was limited because of the specialized knowledge and equipment required to keep and sell the semen – yet the culprit was never found.8.
Oscar jewelry theftThis year thieves broke into the showroom of an Italian jeweler and stole £10 million worth of diamonds while its owners were in Los Angeles hosting a party to celebrate the Oscars. The heist took place at the Damiani showroom in Milan’s fashion district as celebrities such as Tilda Swinton were sporting Damiani jewelry at the Oscar ceremony. The thieves had spent more than a month digging a tunnel from a disused cellar in an adjoining building.
Police said that the drilling had been heard for weeks but was presumed to be part of continuing building works next door. The four men, disguised as police officers, overpowered the staff and tied them up with electrical cable, sealed their mouths with tape and locked them in the washroom. They then helped themselves to jewellery from the safe-deposit boxes and left the way they had come.
Police said that the entire operation had taken little more than 40 minutes. The employees managed to free themselves and raise the alarm, but by then the gang was long gone. The thieves, who Police say may have had “inside assistance”, have still not been caught.9.
Bank tunnel robberyThieves in Brazil netted $65 million after digging a 200m tunnel into a bank from a nearby house. The heist, which occurred in August 2005, is Brazil’s largest ever bank robbery. Around 10 men are thought to have spent three months digging a hole from a house that was rented in the name of a fake gardening business.
The theft happened over the weekend, but was not discovered until Monday morning because the bank was closed. Neighbours reported seeing vanloads of material being removed each day. Only two suspects have been caught and only $500,000 has been recovered.10.
Castle tourist theftIn August 2003 a painting worth up to £50 million – Madonna with the Yarnwinder – was snatched from the Duke of Buccleuch's home at Drumlanrig Castle in Scotland. The painting was stolen by two men who joined a public tour and overpowered a guide. Julian Radcliffe, chairman of the Art Loss Register, said such a heist "would probably be easier to do it when it was open to the public rather than at night when all the alarms were set".
The painting is still missing despite the offer of a substantial reward for information leading to the arrest of the thieves. Sources: http://timesbusiness.typepad.com/money_weblog/2008/03/the-10-most-inf.html .
Infamous Bank Robberies # Great Brinks Robbery: Armed robbery of the Brinks building in Boston, MA on 1/17/50. At the time, biggest heist in United States history ($1,218,211.19)# Lufthansa Heist: On 12/11/78, 8 men robbed a Kennedy Airport vault of $5 million cash and almost $1 million in jewels# North Hollywood Shootout: Two men attempted to rob a North Hollywood Bank of America on 2/28/97, but were killed in one of the bloodiest police shootouts in U.S. history# Dunbar Armed Robbery: This is the largest heist in U.S. history. On 9/13/97, Allen Pace, who worked for the Dunbar Armored Facility in LA, conducted an "inside" robbery.
Pace and his crew made off with $18.9 million, but they were arrested years later# Bank of America Robbery: Conducted by mobster Ralph Guriano, this robbery took place at the World Trade Center's Bank of America. Guriano's crew made off with $1.6 million....and my personal favorite :)The Great Northfield, Minnesota, RaidOK, in terms of actual success, this 1876 robbery was a bust. But it had a heck of a cast: legendary bandits Frank and Jesse James; Cole, Jim, and Bob Younger; and three lesser known outlaws. Their target was Northfield’s First National Bank, which the gang settled on after casing a half-dozen other towns.
Clearly, not enough casing, as the robbery couldn’t have gone worse. The bank’s cashier refused to open the safe, an alert passerby sounded the alarm, and townspeople killed two of the robbers as the rest escaped. A week later, a posse killed or captured all of the other outlaws except the James brothers, who escaped home to Missouri.It was the beginning of the end for 19th-century America’s most notorious bandits.
Worse still? The take from the Northfield bank was a mere $26.70. Sources: http://www.listafterlist.com/tabid/57/listid/5767/News++Weather/Famous+US+Bank+Robberies.aspx .
8 famous bank robberies + the biggest of all time Wikipedia provides a list of great US bank robberies: Great Brink’s Robbery, 1950, $1.2m cash, $1.5m other Air France Robbery, 1967, $420k Cash, unprosecuted. Lufthansa heist, 1978 Security Pacific Bank, Norco, California, 1980 North Hollywood shootout, 1997 Dunbar Armored robbery, 1997, $18.9m cash Loomis Fargo Bank Robbery, 1997, $17.3 million in cash Bank of America Robbery, 1998, $1.6 million cash BUT, the all time greatest heist has to be on March 18, 2003, when robbers stole about US$1 billion from the Central Bank of Iraq hours after the United States began bombing Baghdad. Sources: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_famous_bank_robbers_and_robberies .
2 Future answerers would be wise to read the question carefully...
Future answerers would be wise to read the question carefully...
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Who is the Managing Partner of GrowthField Financial Services.
I cant really gove you an answer,but what I can give you is a way to a solution, that is you have to find the anglde that you relate to or peaks your interest. A good paper is one that people get drawn into because it reaches them ln some way.As for me WW11 to me, I think of the holocaust and the effect it had on the survivors, their families and those who stood by and did nothing until it was too late.