Top 10 Unsolved Heists - YouTube

Channel: TDC

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These are the top 10 unsolved heists in history, ranked by the value of the goods stolen adjusted
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for inflation to 2014 US dollars.
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The largest unsolved bank robbery in the history of the UK - or all of Europe for that matter
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- went down in December, 2004 in Belfast, Ireland.
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On a Sunday night, groups of armed men dressed as police officers entered the homes of two
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Northern Bank officials and held their families hostage.
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The two bank employees were told to go to work the next day as if nothing was wrong,
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or their families would be killed.
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Fearing for their safety, the workers did what they were told and helped the criminals
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gain access to the bank’s vault, allowing the gang to make off with a haul equivalent
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to $53m in today’s dollars.
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Although one person was convicted of money laundering, despite the high profile of the
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case, no one has been brought to justice for committing the actual crime.
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In August 1994, three gunman burst into the jewelry store of the famous InterContinental
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Carlton Cannes luxury hotel on the French Riviera firing automatic weapons and quickly
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making off with jewelry and precious stones worth nearly $50 million.
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The investigation revealed no bullet holes, meaning the guns were filled with blanks.
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No arrests were ever made.
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Interestingly, the hotel was the main filming location for Alfred Hitchcock’s 1955 jewelry
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heist themed “To Catch a Thief” starring Cary Grant and Grace Kelly.
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For several months in 2005, criminals working from a rented commercial property two blocks
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away from the Fortaleza branch of Brazil’s Central Bank, dug a tunnel several hundred
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feet long that came up right underneath the bank’s vault.
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Over the course of a weekend, they successfully disarmed various sensors and alarms and removed
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five large containers of cash totaling more than R$164 million Brazilian real.
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The sophisticated heist wasn’t discovered until Monday morning, when the bank reopened
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and the bills weren’t numbered sequentially, allowing the robbers plenty of time to escape
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with cash that would be nearly impossible to trace.
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Several people involved with the crime have been caught in the years since, but the majority
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of the 25 suspects remain at large.
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In a strange twist, 6 of the robbers have been kidnapped after the incident and held
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for large ransom payments which their families - presumably using the money stolen in the
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robbery - paid.
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One of these was an alleged mastermind in the case who was found shot to death on an
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isolated road with handcuff marks on his wrists.
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There’s evidence that dirty police and security officials may have helped carry out the heist.
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One morning in 2005 a group of heavily armed men dressed as KLM airline employees stormed
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a cargo area at Schiphol airport in Amsterdam in broad daylight and stole an armored truck
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filled with diamonds and other valuables.
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The precious, uncut stones were on their way to Antwerp, Belgium - the diamond capital
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of Europe.
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The abandoned truck was later recovered, empty, of course.
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No suspects have ever been apprehended despite the many witnesses at the scene.
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Antwerp is exactly where we head for the 6th most successful heist in history back in 2003,
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another $100m diamond job in the center of the city’s gem district.
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Leonardo Notarbartolo started rented an office in the Antwerp Diamond Center building nearly
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three full years beforehand in order to credibly pose as a diamond merchant, gain access to
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the building, learn how it was secured, and carefully plan the operation.
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When the time was right, Notarbartolo and his five-man team sprung into action, gaining
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access to the vault and more than 123 of its 160 safe-deposit boxes.
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After doing a poor job of dispensing of the evidence linking him to the crime, Notarbartolo
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was apprehended and found guilty of orchestrating the heist.
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Sentenced to just ten years in prison though, he was freed early.
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None of his accomplices or the diamonds, were ever found.
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The biggest diamond heist ever was over in a flash as you can see from this security
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footage of a man armed with a handgun carrying out a 30- second raid of a jewelry showcase
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at a French Riviera hotel.
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The unarmed guards were not willing to give their lives to protect the inventory allowing
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the man to get exactly what he came for: a sack of 72 jewels in a suitcase that was part
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of a display put on by the Israeli billionaire Lev Leviev.
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Despite a $1.3m reward, no arrests have been made.
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Nineteen years earlier, this same hotel was the one robbed by the armed men wielding blank-shooting
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automatic weapons that I told you about earlier in this video.
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On January 20, 1976, as Lebanon was embroiled in a bloody civil war, the Palestinian Liberation
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Organization took full advantage of the chaos and robbed one of the biggest banks in the
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country.
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They started by blasting through a wall from an adjacent church, but they couldn’t break
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into the vault.
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Instead of giving up, they just called in more fighters and took complete control of
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the surrounding streets.
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Because of the war engulfing Beirut, the security situation in the country was so out of control,
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the gang were able to hold the area - not for a few minutes or a few hours - but for
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two entire days while they waited for the arrival of locksmiths employed by French mobsters.
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Once inside, they took two more days to clean out all the currency, gold, bonds, jewelry
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and rare coins from the vault; making off with a haul worth around $150m in today’s
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money.
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After paying the mobsters for their services, they chartered planes and flew the loot to
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places like Switzerland, where much of it disappeared into the abyss that is the land
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of the secret, tax-free bank account.
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In 2008, three men wearing ski masks strolled into a small, private art museum in Zurich
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right before it closed on a Sunday afternoon and - while forcing terrified staff and visitors
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at gunpoint to lie facedown on the ground, snatched four paintings off the walls of one
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of the rooms, threw them into the back of their van, and sped off in broad daylight,
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never to be seen again.
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The four works stolen were a Cézanne, a Degas, a van Gogh, and a Monet, together worth an
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estimated $163 million.
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Each year, the F.B.I.
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says losses from cultural property crime like this can total as high as $6 billion globally.
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Just like in Beirut thirty years earlier, war torn Baghdad’s banks were extremely
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susceptible after the 2003 US-led invasion completely destabilized the security of Iraq.
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Except instead of bursting through the bank from the outside, one night in 2007, three
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guards whose job it was to guard the Dar Es Salaam bank, decided that a better idea would
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be to just go ahead and rob it.
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And man did they rob it.
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In the biggest bank heist in history, the men made off with $282m in US bills.
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Since it would have been difficult to get through the city’s many checkpoints with
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that much cash, they almost certainly had help from the militias...or maybe they were
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forced to do it by the militias who may have helped themselves to the money.
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However it went down - even though - as bank employees - their identities were well known
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- they were never caught.
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At 1:24 a.m. on the morning of St Patrick’s Day 1990 in Boston, two men wearing police
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uniforms tricked the two security guards inside the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum into thinking
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there had been a disturbance, and were buzzed into the building.
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These fake cops then placed the security guards under arrest.
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When one of the guards asked why they were being handcuffed, the robbers responded, “you’re
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not being arrested, this is a robbery, don’t give us any problems and you won’t get hurt.”
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The intruders then took the guards down to the basement and handcuffed them to a pipe.
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For over 81 minutes, the thieves worked their way through the museum, making two trips to
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their car to load it up with over 13 pieces of art, including works by Manet, Degas, Vermeer
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and Rembrandt.
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It was the largest private property theft ever, valued at over $500m.
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The crime remains unsolved and the items are all still missing.