Tuesday, February 19, 2013

The Belgian Job - 350 million in diamonds ! History repeats itself ?

http://www.businessinsider.com/details-of-belgium-diamond-heist-2013-2


Seven Crazy Details From The Belgian Diamond Heist That Will Definitely Get Turned Into A Movie

diamond heist
A burned-out van found near the airport after the heist.
Earlier it was reported that armed men stole as much as $67 million worth of diamonds from the Brussels airport.
Other reports — including the Wall Street JournalUSA Today, and Belgium broadcaster VRT — said the loot may have been worth closer to $350 million.
Here are more details of the heist, which officials are saying will go down as "one of the biggest" in history:

• A Brussels prosecutor’s office spokeswoman told The AP that eight masked men "tried to pass themselves off as police officers" by wearing outfits resembling dark police clothing and even armbands worn by airport police.

beligum police

Belgian police


• The robbers drove through an airport security fence in two black vehicles, a Mercedes van and Audi A8 (which are models typically used by Belgian security forces), that were outfitted with flashing blue police lights.

audi 8
An Audi 8 driven by police in Brussels

• The robbers forced their way through a hole in the fence, at a place where two work sites obstructed a clear view. Airport authorities said it must have taken more than simply blasting through the opening with a vehicle to get through.

Screen shot 2013 02 19 at 11.06.45 AM



The scene near the fence that thieves broke through to enter the tarmac.

• The robbers, armed with machine guns, drove straight up to the Zurich-bound Swiss passenger plane about 20 minutes before departure time, threatened to shoot the guards and the aircraft’s two pilots, then methodically broke into the hold on the outside plane where the diamonds were being held.


• Brussels Airport spokesman Jan Van der Cruysse told Bloomberg the diamond thieves needed only three minutes at the plane and only 11 minutes total to seize 120 parcels, mostly containing diamonds but some also contained precious metals. 

"This was a very precise, almost military-organized and well-executed robbery," Van der Cruysse said.

Debeers diamonds



• The thieves immediately left where they came in. On Tuesday morning police found a burnt-out van — which they suspect was used by the robbers — not far from the airport.

• A person familiar with the events told WSJ that the thieves appear to have had substantial help from insiders.

Screen shot 2013 02 19 at 11.05.40 AM



we are talking about is obviously a gigantic sum,” Caroline De Wolf of the Antwerp World Diamond Center told AP. “It was incredible how easy it all went."
Antwerp, the second-largest city in Belgium, is the world’s capital for diamond cutting as about eight in every 10 rough diamonds, and five in every 10 polished diamonds, pass through it.

Has the Amsterdam gang struck again - note the similarities , also happened in February ? 


http://www.businessinsider.com/belgium-diamond-heist-is-similar-to-amsterdams-heist-2013-2

An Eerily Similar 2005 Diamond Heist Happened Eight Years Ago — And Was Never Solved

diamonds
Here's some bad news for those who lost their diamonds in Monday night's Brussels airport heist:
An almost identical robbery happened at the Amsterdam Schiphol airport eight years ago and has never been solved.
On February 25, 2005, one of the "largest thefts in history" occurred when armed men hijacked a KLM truck at Amsterdam's airport, gained entrance into the airport's secured cargo area, drove straight up to the vehicle carrying the jewels and took them without any gunshots fired. 
Here are some other eerily similar details between the two diamond heists:
    • The thieves in both cases dressed up in outfits resembling security officers. 
    • Both cases involved vehicles that are typically used by security officers. In the Belgium case, the robbers used a Mercedes van and Audi 8, which are usually driven by Belgian security forces. In the Amsterdam case, the robbers used a stolen KLM cargo truck.
    • The armed men in both cases were able to gain access into secured areas at the airport. In the Belgium case, the robbers gained access to the airport runway 20 minutes before the plane was scheduled to depart. In the Amsterdam case, the robbers bypassed security to get into the cargo terminal, which requires a special entry card.
    • Both cases involved Antwerp, Belgium. 
      In the Amsterdam case, the diamonds were scheduled to land in Antwerp and in the Belgium case, the jewels were scheduled to land in Zurich.
    • Neither cases involved any gunshots fired.
    • In both cases, the robbers knew exactly where and when to strike, which leads investigators to believe the heists involved inside help.




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