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First for breaking news and analysis: Compelling world news stories from NBC News journalists. Follow us on Twitter and Facebook.

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  • 20
    May
    2013
    10:59am, EDT

    Five dead, including suspect, in bungled Israel bank raid

    Dudu Greenspan/AP

    An Israeli woman is taken out of a bank in the town of Beersheba, southern Israel, on Monday after an attempted robbery in which at least five people were killed.

    By Ranna Khalil, Producer, NBC News

    Editor's note: This story includes a correction.

    TEL AVIV, Israel -- Five people died on Monday after a robber tried to hold up a bank in southern Israel and then took a woman hostage for over an hour, officials said. The robber shot himself dead as police closed in, police said.

    The robber carried out the botched heist in a residential street in Beersheba at about lunchtime local time, police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said on Monday. It was a branch of Bank Hapoalim, Reuters reported.

    "The moment he entered the bank he started killing," Rosenfeld added on Tuesday.  

    The suspect remained at the scene and took a woman hostage, officials said. The woman was freed after he shot himself dead.

    Police initially said there were two robbers but later revised that to one.  The error was discovered after a man initially thought to have been one of the robbers was taken to hospital and treated for gunshot wounds, Rosenfeld said.

    “Four people have been killed and the robber apparently shot himself dead. The scene is now clear," Reuters quoted regional police commander Yoram Levy as telling Israel Radio.

    Israeli media reports said the four victims were three bank employees and a customer, Reuters reported.

    Four civilians were injured, Rosenfeld said. 

    Violent bank heists are rare in Israel. In 2011, a robber killed a security guard in a bank in the center of the country.

    Reuters and NBC News' Alastair Jamieson contributed to this report.

     

    13 comments

    There is a good book called "The Best Way to Rob a Bank is to Own One". They should have visited Wall Street and learned from Goldman and the rest of the masters....

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  • 8
    Apr
    2013
    4:22pm, EDT

    Thieves make off with millions in brazen highway robbery in Italy

    Matteo Bazzi / ANSA via EPA

    Police inspect a security van after it was raided by gunmen on the A9 highway between Milan and Como in northn Italy on Monday, April 8.

    By M. Alex Johnson, staff writer, NBC News

    In what police called "the perfect robbery," bandits made off with millions of Euros in an ambush Monday on two armored security vans in northern Italy. 


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    The meticulously planned attack involved about a dozen men who fired smoke bombs and more than 50 shots to frighten security crews on the trucks. Astonishingly, no one was injured in the hail of bullets on the A9 highway between Milan and Como, police said.

    Police told the Milan newspaper Il Giornale that the operation — which was "planned with the precision of a paramilitary operation" — went down this way:

    Matteo Bazzi / ANSA via EPA

    Forensic officers inspect one of the vans that was robbed in a precisely planned operation Monday, April 8, in northern Italy.

    Wearing police clothing, the bandits blocked traffic on the highway by setting fire to a truck about 7 a.m. (1 a.m. ET). Once the armored vans came along, they parked another truck behind them, hemming them in. 


    Firing Kalashnikov rifles into the air, the thieves set off a smoke bomb beneath one of the trucks to fool the guards into abandoning their posts in the belief that it was on fire. They then started unpacking the loot, which included an unspecified haul of gold bullion. 

    In an indication of how thoroughly the bandits had studied the security company's routine, they didn't bother with the other truck, knowing it was an empty decoy, police said. The commandos escaped in three cars as police were slowed by nails the crew had scattered at three different locations.

    Traffic on the busy motorway, which runs to the Swiss border, was frozen for hours.

    The security company, Gruppo Battistolli di Vicenza, said it hadn't yet tabulated the haul, but because it serves banks, major retail groups and other private institutions in the area, the sum was likely to be "a few million Euros."

    "They were certainly a gang of professionals, as the job was prepared down to every detail," Marco Melatti, a spokesman for the company, told the Italian news agency ANSA.

    Follow M. Alex Johnson on Twitter and Facebook.

    Watch World News videos on NBCNews.com

    72 comments

    I love it when no one gets hurt and they get away. Perfecto

    Show more
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  • Updated
    19
    Feb
    2013
    7:55pm, EST

    Robbers snatch $50 million of diamonds off plane in Belgium

    Mozkito / Photonews via Getty Images

    Firemen extinguish the burnt out remains of the van used in the heist near Brussels Airport on Feb. 18, 2013 in Zaventem, Belgium. Using a van and car to break down the security fence a gang of robbers stole diamonds estimated to be worth 50 million euros from a security van.

    By Raf Casert, The Associated Press

    (Editor's note: An earlier version of this article led to a correction)

    Eight armed and masked men made a hole in a security fence at the international airport in Brussels, Belgium, drove onto the tarmac and snatched millions of dollars' worth of diamonds from the hold of a Swiss-bound plane without firing a shot, authorities said Tuesday.

    The gang used two vehicles in their daring raid Monday, dragged the cache of stones and sped off into the darkness, said Anja Bijnens, spokeswoman for the Brussels prosecutor's office.

    Police found a burnt-out vehicle close to the airport later Monday night and said they were still looking for clues.

    The heist was estimated at some $50 million in diamonds, said Caroline De Wolf of the Antwerp World Diamond Centre.

    "What we are talking about is obviously a gigantic sum," De Wolf told VRT network.

    The thieves targeted a diamond transfer at an airport in Brussels, cutting a hole in a security fence then making a beeline for a delivery van that was loading a plane with the diamonds. NBC's Keir Simmons reports.

    An airport spokesman said the robbers made a hole in the perimeter fence and drove up to the Swiss passenger plane, which was ready to leave.

    The robbers got out of the car, flashed their weapons and took the loot from the hold, said airport spokesman Jan Van Der Crujsse. Without firing a shot they drove off through the same hole in the fence, completing the spectacular theft within minutes, he said.

    Van Der Crujsse could not explain how the area could be so vulnerable to theft. "We abide by the most stringent rules," he said.

    The Swiss flight, bound for Zurich and operated by Helvetic Airways, was canceled. Swiss, an affiliate of Germany's Deutsche Lufthansa AG, declined to comment on the heist, citing the ongoing judicial investigation.

    The insurance for air transport — handled sometimes by airlines themselves or external insurance companies — is usually relatively cheap because it's considered to be the safest way of transporting small high value items, logistics experts say.

    Unlike a car or a truck, an airplane cannot be attacked by robbers once it's on its way, and it is considered to be very safe before the departure and after the plane's arrival because the aircraft is always within the confines of an airport — which are normally highly secured.

    Philip Baum, an aviation security consultant in Britain, said the robbery was worrying — not because the fence was breached, but because the response did not appear to have been immediate. That, he said, raised questions as to whether alarms were ringing in the right places.

    "It does seem very worrying that someone can actually have the time to drive two vehicles onto the airport, effect the robbery, and drive out without being intercepted," Baum said.

    That amount of time would also allow someone to board the plane, he said.

    A decade ago the Belgian city of Antwerp, the world capital of diamond-cutting, was the scene of what was probably one of the biggest diamond heists in history, when robbers took precious stones, jewels, gold and securities from the high-security vaults at Antwerp's Diamond Center, yielding loot that police in 2003 estimated to be worth about $100 million.

    Antwerp's Diamond Center stands in the heart of the high-surveillance diamond district where police and dozens of cameras work around the clock, and security has been beefed up further since the spectacular 2003 robbery.

    This story was originally published on Tue Feb 19, 2013 4:13 AM EST

    © 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    185 comments

    So much for the terrorism angle. If these guys can do the robbery, how does taking my belt off, my shoes off, being scanned and groped do any good? I do this for NO REASON except being controlled!

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    Explore related topics: europe, world, belgium, airport, heist, robbery, gems, diamond, brussels, featured, updated, crime-courts
  • 16
    Jun
    2012
    9:50pm, EDT

    Canadian guard sought in fatal armored-car robbery caught at US crossing

    Edmonton Police / AFP - Getty Images

    A photo from the Edmonton Police Service in Canada shows Travis Brandon Baumgartner, 21.

    By Gil Aegerter, Staff Writer, NBC News

    A man sought in a fatal armored-car robbery at the University of Alberta was arrested Saturday at a U.S. border crossing, police told Canadian media.


    Follow @msnbc_world

    Edmonton police Sgt. Dave Reitzel said Travis Baumgartner, 21, was stopped at the crossing in Lynden, Wash., the CBC reported. The crossing is southeast of Vancouver, British Columbia, and north of Seattle.

    Baumgartner had been sought since the four armored-car guards he was working with were shot at the University of Alberta in Edmonton, Alberta, early Friday. Three of the guards were killed, one critically wounded. No students were involved, police said.  


    Police said that Baumgartner was alone in a Ford F-150 pickup when he was stopped and that they found money in the truck. Reuters reported that Mike Milne, a U.S. Customs and Border Protection spokesman in Seattle, said Baumgartner had a backpack with $334,000 in Canadian currency.

    Reuter reported that Scott Pattison, a spokesman for the Edmonton Police Service, said no extradition proceedings were necessary because Baumgartner had been caught at the border. Customs officials said Baumgartner would be transferred to Canadian custody Saturday night.

    Baumgartner has been charged with three counts of first-degree murder and one count of attempted murder. He and four other guards with G4S Cash Solutions were loading money into bank machines on the campus when the shooting occurred, police said. Michelle Shegelski , 26; Eddie Rejano, 39; and Brian Ilesic, 35, were killed, The Associated Press reported. Another guard was critically injured. 

    Baumgartner lived with his mother and step-sister in Sherwood Park, just east of Edmonton, the AP said.

    More world news from msnbc.com and NBC News:

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    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

     

    227 comments

    More violence from Canada. Maybe the US should build a fence.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: canada, crime, robbery, courts, alberta
  • 15
    Jun
    2012
    9:17am, EDT

    Three dead, one critical in Alberta campus shooting

    REUTERS/Dan Riedlhuber

    Police investigate the scene of an armored-car robbery at the University of Alberta in Edmonton, Friday.

    By msnbc.com staff

    Three people were killed and one is in critical condition after a shooting at the scene of an apparent armed robbery at the University of Alberta campus in Edmonton, Canada early Friday, according to reports.

    “It was an apparent armed robbery of armored vehicle and or vehicles,” police spokesman Scott Pattison told the National Post of Canada.


    “The university was quickly put into lockdown, it has its own protocols and it remains in lockdown now,” he said. “It’s a crime scene so students are required to stay remain in their dorms.”

    Dan Riedlhuber/Reuters

    Police investigate the scene of an armored-car robbery at the University of Alberta in Edmonton, Friday.

    No students were involved in the shooting, he added.

    Pattison told CTV the victims are all thought to be employees of an armored vehicle security company. "The suspect and or suspects remain at large at this time," he told the station.

    The shooting happened shortly after midnight in the Hub Mall area, which is a combination of student residences and shops, according to an Associated Press report.

    More world news from msnbc.com and NBC News:

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    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

     

    42 comments

    So much for very strict gun control laws. Goes to show that when you take away the peoples right to have firearms, only the criminals will have them and you get killings like this.

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  • 2
    Mar
    2012
    11:53am, EST

    Bad Samaritans who robbed victim of London riots caught on camera

    Amateur video of the robbery shown in this TODAY.com's file video from August 2011.

    By Alastair Jamieson, msnbc.com

    Two men have been found guilty of robbing an injured student as they pretended to help him during last summer's riots in London - an act that was caught on camera and provoked outrage across Britain.

    The pair were convicted of robbery and violent disorder, the BBC reported.


    Their victim, Malaysian accountancy student Ashraf Rossli, 20, had been in the UK for just a month when he was attacked on 8 August 2011 in the east London district of Barking.

    Handout pictures obtained from the Metropolitan Police show British teenager Beau Isagba (L) who was convicted in February 2012 of assaulting and stealing from a Malaysian student during last year's London riots, Reece Donovan (C) and John Kafunda (R) who were found guilty on March 2, 2012 of posing as Good Samaritans to steal from the student in an incident caught on camera. Kafunda was convicted of robbery and violent disorder. Donovan was convicted of theft, violent disorder and later robbing a supermarket.

    Rioters had brought chaos to the streets with widespread violence and petty crime.

    The Evening Standard newspaper reported that Rossli was on his way to a friend's house when his bicycle was stolen and he was punched, breaking his jaw in two places.

    As Rossli stumbled along a road, covered in blood, John Kafunda, 22, and Reece Donovan, 24, appeared to help by steering him away from the violence - but instead from stole items from his backpack.

    A portable Sony PlayStation games console, a wallet and other items were taken, valued at a total of $750 (£500).

    Footage of the incident, captured on a mobile phone and circulated on the internet, prompted outrage in Britain where well-wishers raised more than $27,000 (£22,000) for Rossli to help him recover and continue his studies.

    The Evening Standard report said judge at London's Wood Green Crown Court told the men they can both expect lengthy custodial sentences when they are sentenced on 13 March Last month, Beau Isagba, 17, was found guilty of assaulting Rossli and stealing his bike. He will be sentenced on 9 March.

    Ch Supt Gary Buttercase, of the Metropolitan Police, said: "I have met Mr Rossli and he is a man of humility and dignity and a tremendous credit to his country."

    Follow msnbc.com's Alastair Jamieson on Twitter.

    23 comments

    This is one of the disadvantages of a multi-cultural society...it changes the cultural norms. England has a tainted society. She has lowered her standards to accommodate the non-English and she is worse for it.

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  • 17
    Feb
    2012
    3:48am, EST

    Armed robbers steal 70 relics from museum in Olympia, Greece

    Dimitris Papaioannou / AP

    Onlookers and police gather near the museum in Olympia, Greece, following Friday's theft.

    By msnbc.com staff and news services

    Updated at 10:32 a.m. ET: ATHENS, Greece -- Armed thieves looted a museum on Friday in Greece's Olympia, birthplace of the Olympic Games, stealing bronze and pottery artifacts just weeks after the country's National Gallery was also burgled.

    Culture Minister Pavlos Geroulanos offered to resign following the latest robbery.

    Police said a female security guard was overpowered before some 70 bronze and pottery objects were stolen. The culprits reportedly used hammers to smash display cases.


    "They overwhelmed and gagged the woman who guarded the building," a police official told Reuters. "The value of the objects stolen has not been estimated yet."

    Police set up roadblocks in the area as part of a broad search to try to locate the robbers, who wore ski masks.

    Sporting authorities are to hold a ceremony at the museum on May 10 to light the Olympic flame for the London Games.

    'Treasures'
    Olympia Mayor Efthimios Kotzas urged authorities to improve security at the site.

    "The level of security is indeed lacking," Kotzas told state-run NET television. "These are treasures. A piece of world heritage has been lost thanks to these thieves ... I think (authorities) should have been more mindful and the security should have been more serious."

    In January, three works of art, including one by Pablo Picasso and another by Dutch painter Piet Mondrian, were stolen from the country's National Gallery in the capital, Athens.

    After the first gallery robbery, culture ministry officials said cuts to museum budgets had damaged security arrangements.

    Greece has seen a rise in crime as its debt-laden economy has shrunk 16 percent in size from its 2008 peak, leading to youth unemployment of just under 50 percent.

    Rioters burn 45 buildings as Greek government backs cuts

    A government spokesman said Prime Minister Lucas Papademos would decide whether to accept Geroulanos' resignation once all the facts were clear.

    According to the FBI, the stolen antiquities trade is worth more than $6 billion per year.

    The agency runs the National Stolen Art File, a computerized index of reported stolen art and cultural properties, for the use of law enforcement agencies across the world. It also maintains a task force 13 special agents dedicated to investigating the trade.

    More from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • 'Absolutely brilliant': NYT's Shadid remembered
    • Strait of Hormuz: Iranians, smugglers and fireworks
    • Robbers loot Greece's Ancient Olympia museum
    • Pentagon details downsizing of US forces in Europe
    • 1 year on, wounded photojournalist reflects on Arab Spring

    The Associated Press, Reuters and breakingnews.com's David Wyllie contributed to this report.

    101 comments

    In situations where there are riots in the streets, extra precautions should be made to make sure that artifacts from over 2000 years ago in human history are not lost forever because of looters. Maybe during times like this, some of the more precious artifacts could be "reproduced" via scanning and …

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