Banco Central burglary at Fortaleza

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View of Fortaleza's Praia of Iracema and Beira-Mar
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View of Fortaleza's Praia of Iracema and Beira-Mar

The Banco Central burglary at Fortaleza was a bank robbery of the Banco Central in Fortaleza, a city in northeastern Brazil. It is one of the world's largest burglaries, along with the 1987 Knightsbridge Security Deposit robbery in London.

Contents

The burglary

On the weekend of August 6 and August 7, 2005 a gang of burglars, suspected to be either the Gang of the Tattooed or First Capital Command, tunneled into the Banco Central in Fortaleza. They removed five containers of 50-real notes, with an estimated value of 164.755.150 reais (US$69.8 million, £38.6 million, 56 million), initially reported as 156 million. The money was uninsured; a bank spokeswoman stated that the risks were too small to justify the insurance premiums. The burglars managed to evade or disable the bank's internal alarms and sensors; the burglary remained undiscovered until the bank opened for business on the morning of Monday, August 8.

The Banco Central is a national banking institution charged with control of the money supply. The money in the vault was being examined to see if it should be recirculated or destroyed. The bills were not numbered sequentially, making them almost impossible to trace.

Planning

Three months earlier, the gang of burglars had rented an empty property in the centre of the city and then tunneled 78 meters (255 ft) beneath two city blocks to a position beneath the bank. The gang had renovated a house and put up a sign indicating it was a landscaping company selling both natural and artificial grass as well as plants. Neighbours, who estimated that the gang consisted of between six and ten men, described how they had seen van-loads of soil being removed daily, but understood this to be a normal activity of the business. The tunnel, being roughly 70 cm (2.3 ft) square and running 4 meters (13 ft) beneath the surface, was well-constructed: it was lined with wood and plastic and had its own lighting and air conditioning systems.

Execution

On the final weekend, the gang broke through 1.1 meters (3.6 ft) of steel-reinforced concrete to enter the bank vault. The bank notes weighed approximately 3,500 kg (approx. 7,700 lbs) and would have required a considerable amount of time and effort to remove.

Investigation

"They worked for several months", police said, "The gardening company was working since March. They had sophisticated equipment, including GPS (global positioning systems) and experts in math, engineering and excavation."

Police located a pick-up truck branded with a Grama Sintética (Synthetic Lawns) logo found at the rented house. Bolt cutters, a blowtorch, an electric saw and other tools used to penetrate the concrete barrier were found both inside the vault and within the empty property. The house was covered in white powder to make locating fingerprints difficult.

Suspects

The Brazilian Federal Police are investigating a possible connection between the burglars and car resellers in Fortaleza. On August 10 the Military Police of Minas Gerais arrested two men driving a truck car transporter in Sete Lagoas, a city located near Belo Horizonte. More than $2,1 million in cash was recovered in three pickup trucks found on that vehicle transporter.

Five men were arrested September 28 with about $5.4 million of the money and told the police they had helped dig the tunnel. Eighteen suspects remain at large. Prosecutors have said the group tried unsuccessfully to charter a small plane days before the robbery to use it to escape and move the money out of the country. So far, authorities have recovered more than $7 million but $63 million remains unaccounted for.

On October 22 the body of the suspected mastermind, Luis Fernando Ribeiro, 26, was found 9 October on an isolated road near Camanducaia, 200 miles (320 km) west of Rio de Janeiro. He had been shot seven times and had marks on his wrists as if he had been handcuffed. "It was definitely because of the robbery," according to a police official of Minas Gerais State who identified himself only as Corporal Leonino.

Mr. Ribeiro fled from Fortaleza to São Paulo after the robbery. He was kidnapped on October 7, and although his family paid $890,000 in ransom, he was not freed.

A document signed by four state prosecutors and published Friday in the Rio newspaper O Globo said there were signs that police officers might have been involved in the kidnapping and killing. "There are indications, not entirely proven, that the authors of the crime are police officers or people linked to them," the document said.

On October 28, a person linked to a former security guard involved in the burglary was arrested with $87,000.

See also

References

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