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Wikipedia

Bank robbery

Bank robbery is the criminal act of stealing from a bank, specifically while bank employees and customers are subjected to force, violence, or a threat of violence. This refers to robbery of a bank branch or teller, as opposed to other bank-owned property, such as a train, armored car, or (historically) stagecoach. It is a federal crime in the United States.

A masked man poses as a bank robber during a demonstration of a German device that protected cash and sounded an alarm during a robbery (1931).

According to the Federal Bureau of Investigation's Uniform Crime Reporting Program, robbery is "the taking or attempting to take anything of value from the care, custody, or control of a person or persons by force or threat of force or violence or by putting the victim in fear."[1] By contrast, burglary is "unlawful entry of a structure to commit a felony or theft."

Overview edit

Places edit

Bank robbery occurs in cities and towns. This concentration is often attributed to there being more branches in urban areas, but the number of bank robberies is higher than the number of branches. [citation needed]

This has advantages both for bank robbers and for law enforcement. In urban areas the transportation infrastructure is more highly developed, especially where banks tend to cluster near retail shopping areas and commercial districts. Such banks are highly profitable targets for robbers, who are then afforded a number of potential escape routes. Law enforcement benefit by being able to respond more quickly, and the odds of catching a bank robber on or near the scene is higher than other types of crime. This is because most bank robberies are reported very quickly while the crime is in progress; most bank robberies occur during daylight hours, have multiple witnesses and with modern technology often produce photographic images that can be distributed and used immediately to canvass the local area. Consequently, many bank robbers are caught the same day. The clearance rate for bank robbery is among the highest of all crimes, at nearly 60%.[2]

The urban location of the crime also contributes to its repeat victimization profile, a measure of how quickly a crime victim will suffer a repeat of the original crime. One study carried out by the Home Office found that in England, one third of banks at which a robbery has occurred will be robbed again within three months, while the same study found that in Tallahassee, Florida, one quarter of robbed banks will suffer repeat robbery within a week, and over half of robbed banks will be robbed again within a month.[3]

Characteristics edit

The Australian Institute of Criminology analyzed trends in bank robbery over a four-year period. Of the 808 bank robbery incidents between January 1998 and May 2002 in which the number of offenders involved in the hold-up was recorded, 55% were committed by lone offenders, 25% by pairs, and 20% by three or more robbers. Unarmed offenders accounted for 28% of robberies, caused the fewest injuries to victims (one percent of all victims' injuries), were the type of robber who most often used a note to threaten bank staff (46% of all their robberies), and failed most often in their robbery attempts (33% failure). Unarmed gangs inflicted the most injuries to victims (51%) and failed the least in their robbery attempts (6% failure). Armed robbers used a disguise more often compared to unarmed robbers, with armed pairs employing disguises most often (59%).[4]

According to the Sourcebook of Criminal Justice Statistics injuries occur in about two percent and a death occurs in less than one percent of all U.S. bank robberies.[5][6] Violent takeover bank robberies that are often portrayed in the media are rare. The majority of bank robberies taking place today are so-called "note jobs." These are usually accomplished by simply passing a written note to the teller demanding money. The idea is to attract as little attention as possible. In most cases, other customers present in the bank during a robbery are unaware of what is occurring. Standard bank policy is to avoid violence as much as possible, so they will normally hand over the money and try to obey the robber's demands. The robber usually makes away with cash, but in small amounts. According to British Bankers' Association data, in 2007 there were 106 attempted or successful robberies in Britain in which an average of 1.6 persons were involved. One third of attempts came up empty while the average haul for a successful attempt was equivalent to US$46,600. Yet 20% of the successes would later prove less than successful by virtue of the robbers being arrested.[7]

Federal Statute edit

Under federal law, bank robbery in the United States is defined, and made illegal, primarily by the bank robbery statute in 18 U.S.C. § 2113 states.[8]

History edit

 
Patty Hearst takes part in the April 1974 Hibernia Bank raid with other SLA members.

Early examples edit

According to The New York Times and the Saturday Evening Post, the first bank robbery in the United States occurred in March 1831 (the 19th according to the Times, the 20th according to the Post). Two men, James Honeyman and William J. Murray, entered the City Bank of New York using forged keys. This allowed them to empty the vault of more than $245,000 in bank money. According to the Times, it cannot be confirmed if this was a robbery or a burglary.[9] The Post later corrected this claim upon learning of a previous 1798 robbery of $162,821 from the Bank of Pennsylvania at Carpenters' Hall.[10][11] The Carpenters' Hall theft also may not have technically been a robbery as there were no signs of force and the thief may have had a key.[12]

On September 14, 1828, five men tunneled through a sewage drain in George Street, Sydney and stole approximately £14,000 in promissory notes and coins from the vault of the Bank of Australia. It has been described as the first bank robbery in Australia and also the largest in Australian history.[13][14][15]

On December 15, 1863, Postmaster Edward Green walked into the First National Bank on Pleasant Street in Malden, Massachusetts, shot the 17-year-old bookkeeper, Frank Converse, and stole $3,000 in large bills and $2,000 in small bills. The directors of the bank offered a $6,000 reward for the arrest of the murderer.[16] This has been described as the first armed bank robbery murder in US history.[12] The crime is detailed in the historical fiction novel, Abel Bodied: Murder at the Malden Bank written by Michael Cloherty.

On October 27, 1878, the Manhattan Savings Institution was robbed. It was the largest bank robbery in U.S. history.[17]

The heist known as the 1907 Tiflis bank robbery in June 1907 in the Russian Empire resulted in 40 deaths, 50 injuries, and the "expropriation" of 341,000 rubles (approximately 3.96 million 2018 US dollars) by Bolsheviks organized by (among others) Vladimir Lenin and Joseph Stalin.

The first bank robbery in Denmark occurred August 18, 1913 in the bank Sparekassen for København og Omegn at Østerbro in Copenhagen. Two men, Danish salesman Lindorff Larsen and a German machinist Güttig, armed with revolvers, got away with 9000 Danish kroner. Güttig was arrested August 30 and Lindorff Larsen committed suicide after having fled the police.[18]

Bank robbery on the American frontier edit

Bank robbery is commonly associated with the American Old West due to a few infamous examples and portrayal in fiction. The Foundation for Economic Education (FEE) in their research, found the scene of the Western bank-robbery to be generally a myth, identifying less than 10 definite bank robberies between 1859 and 1900 across 15 frontier states.[19] Grunge.com pointed out that FEE's research was conducted before many states and the Library of Congress began publishing historical newspapers online, and while bank robberies in the Old West were still uncommon, there were many more than previously assessed.[20]

On February 13, 1866, several men believed to be members of the James-Younger Gang robbed the Clay County Savings Association in Liberty, Missouri, shooting to death an innocent street bystander, 17-year-old student George Clifford "Jolly" Wymore, and escaping with $60,000. This was the first successful daylight bank robbery during peacetime in the US.[21][22][23] Previous robberies such as from the banks in St. Albans, Vermont more than a year earlier were perpetrated by Confederate soldiers, which some historians consider to be not robberies proper but acts of war.[24]

First known use of a getaway car edit

The August 29, 1909 edition of The Rich Hill Tribune contained a front-page news story entitled "Bank Robbers in Motor Car" and according to which two robbers used a gun to rob the Valley bank of Santa Clara of $7,000. They then used a hired automobile to escape and were chased by police and a posse of citizens also in automobiles, eventually leading to their capture.[25]

On December 21, 1911, two armed men of the Bonnot Gang intercepted a bank messenger outside a branch of Société Générale in Paris. They stole a satchel of money he was about to deliver to the bank containing roughly five thousand pounds and escaped in a stolen vehicle.[26] This was the first successful use of a getaway car in a bank robbery.[27][28]

First known use of a helicopter edit

On February 16, 1984, more than $160,000 was stolen from the Merchants and Farmers Bank and Trust Co. in Leesville, Louisiana using a stolen getaway helicopter. [29]

Great Depression era and "Public Enemy" edit

The 1920s and 1930s saw a significant increase in bank robberies in the United States. This led to the formation of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and the designation "Public Enemy" for significant wanted criminals.[30] This era saw the rise of famous gangs such as the Dillinger Gang, the Barrow Gang (1932–1934), and the Barker–Karpis gang. Other famous public enemies included Pretty Boy Floyd (Public Enemy No, 1 in 1934) and Machine Gun Kelly.

First known use of camera footage to apprehend a bank robber edit

In 1957, security cameras installed at St. Clair Savings and Loan in Cleveland recorded the first film footage used to apprehend and identify bank robbers. The robbery occurred on April 12, when a 24-year-old male pointed a gun at a teller while his accomplice, an 18-year-old female, stuffed over $2,000 into a bag. A third accomplice drove the getaway car. The three were captured shortly after video footage of the robbery aired on national news.[31]

Stockholm syndrome edit

In 1973, four hostages were taken during the Norrmalmstorg robbery in Stockholm, Sweden. After their release, the hostages defended their captors and refused to testify against them. This led to an academic interest in a phenomenon soon after referred to as Stockholm syndrome, wherein hostages, during captivity, paradoxically form a sympathetic bond with their captors as a survival strategy.[32] Stockholm syndrome is a "contested illness" due to doubt about the legitimacy of the condition.[33]

Historical bank robbers edit

George Leonidas Leslie (1842 – June 4, 1878) was involved in 80% of the bank robberies in the U.S. from 1869 to his death in 1878. He was involved in the Manhattan Savings Institution robbery.[34]

Jesse James (September 5, 1847 – April 3, 1882) was one of the most notorious bank robbers in American history.

Ned Kelly (December 1854 – 11 November 1880), Australian bushranger and folk hero, pulled off a series of bank robberies in Victoria and New South Wales.

Herman Lamm (April 19, 1890 – December 16, 1930), The first "modern" bank robber, who developed techniques of surveillance and planning, such as casing and getaway maps, used by many latter stick-up men such as John Dillinger.

Bonnie Parker and Clyde Barrow, better known as "Bonny and Clyde" (active February 1932 – May 1934), were an American couple who went on a crime spree during the Great Depression with their associates, the Barrow Gang. They captured the public imagination with their image as a wild young couple. Along with their gang, they were credited with only ten bank robberies, often making away with as little as $80. They were eventually ambushed and killed on the roadside outside Bienville Parish, Louisiana by a posse of Texas and Louisiana lawmen.

John Dillinger (June 22, 1903 – July 22, 1934) robbed banks in the Midwestern United States. Some considered him a dangerous criminal, while others idolized him as a present-day Robin Hood. He gained this latter reputation (and the nickname "Jackrabbit") for his graceful movements during bank heists, such as leaping over the counter (a movement he supposedly copied from the movies) and many narrow getaways from police. On July 22, 1934, FBI agents cornered Dillinger in an alley outside a movie theater in Chicago, Illinois, where he was shot and killed by multiple agents.

George "Baby Face" Nelson (December 6, 1908 – November 27, 1934) was a bank robber and former associate of John Dillinger. He is notable for having killed more FBI agents in the line of duty than any other person. He was killed in a shootout known as The Battle of Barrington, outside Chicago.

Edwin Alonzo Boyd (April 2, 1914 – May 17, 2002) was a Canadian bank robber and leader of the Boyd Gang, which pulled off a string of heists, including the largest in Toronto history.

Clarence Anglin, and brother John Anglin, the infamous Alcatraz escapees, robbed a bank in Alabama.

In the early 20th century, Willie Sutton (June 30, 1901 – November 2, 1980) was asked why he robbed banks, and he was famously reported as answering: "Because that's where the money is." This is, in fact, a quote invented by the interviewer to make the story more interesting.[35] However, when asked, Sutton did write this statement and autograph it for his physician, so in a sense it is accurate.

Prevention edit

In the 1920s, American banks added the security of alarm systems and concrete-reinforced, blast-proof vaults.[36]

 
Expended dye pack after a Los Angeles area Bank of America robbery, January 2, 2008. This particular pack was concealed inside a stack of twenty-dollar bills.

Modern banks have implemented modern security measures, like motion-sensing and high resolution color security cameras, time-locked heavy vault doors, silent alarms, exploding dye packs, bait money, and GPS tracking devices. Some banks supplement this protection with armed or unarmed security guards.[37]

Today's biometric technology makes non-violent methods of gaining access, even by the most experienced safe hackers and code crackers, nearly impossible. Modern vaults and safes are also reinforced to the point that the amount of explosives needed to blow them open would likely create unwanted attention and run the risk of harming the building to the point of collapse. By their very nature, even the most impregnable vault or safe eventually needs to be able to be opened and closed by someone. To circumvent vault and safe security features, robbers often kidnap the bank manager, but that is not always a successful idea as banks have often removed the manager's ability to open the vault.

The police have new measures at their disposal to catch bank robbers, such as well-armed SWAT teams. Forensic identification techniques have also improved greatly; should a bank robber fire a gun, the police can trace the bullet to the exact firearm using ballistic fingerprinting. Martin Kemp, in a BBC documentary, once inquired on the effectiveness of an Uzi in a bank robbery, to which the firearms training instructor joked "that would be sixty-four pieces of evidence to convict you." The sawed-off shotgun, a common robbery weapon in the United Kingdom, Australia and New Zealand where handguns are difficult to obtain, is easily concealable but not particularly effective.

While it is not certain that the first time someone robs a bank they will be caught, if they continue to rob banks, they will most likely be caught. Few criminals are able to make a successful living out of bank robbery over the long run. Bank robberies are still fairly common and are indeed successful, although eventually many bank robbers are found and arrested. A report by the Federal Bureau of Investigation[38] states that, among Category I serious crimes, the arrest rate for bank robbery in 2001 was second only to that of murder. Today most organized crime groups tend to make their money by other means, such as extortion, drug trafficking, gambling, prostitution, loan sharking, identity theft, or online scamming and phishing.

A further factor making bank robbery unattractive for criminals in the United States is the severity with which it is prosecuted. United States Federal Sentencing Guidelines for bank robbery gives long prison terms, which are usually further enhanced by the use or carrying of loaded firearms, prior criminal convictions, and the absence of parole from the federal prison system. As with any type of robbery, the fact that bank robbery is also inherently a violent crime typically causes corrections administrators to place imprisoned bank robbers in harsher high-security institutions.

In film edit

Bank robberies are often a main plot in many heist films. Some of these films are based on the lives of historic bank robbers, such as Bonnie and Clyde (1967), Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid (1969), The Newton Boys (1998) and Public Enemies (2009) (based on the life of John Dillinger).

Dog Day Afternoon (1975), Set It Off (1996), and The Bank Job (2008) are based on actual bank robberies. Other notable but fictional examples include Point Break (1991), Heat (1995), Henry's Crime (2010), and The Town (2010). In The Town, bank robbery is described as an element of life for residents of Charlestown, a neighborhood in Boston. However, this is exaggerated and is disputed by residents of Charlestown, who describe it as outdated, as of when the film The Town was made. Up to the early 2000s, Charlestown was notorious for criminals whose specialty was robbery but also other lucrative crimes.[39]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Bank Robbery". Retrieved 5 March 2017.
  2. ^ "Bank Robbery". January 2007. Retrieved 23 March 2023.
  3. ^ . Archived from the original on 12 December 2009. Retrieved 5 March 2017.
  4. ^ . Archived from the original on 14 February 2017. Retrieved 5 March 2017.
  5. ^ "Pastore, Ann L. and Kathleen Maguire, eds.: Sourcebook of Criminal Justice Statistics, Table 3.151.2008" (PDF). Retrieved 2012-03-28.
  6. ^ "Pastore, Ann L. and Kathleen Maguire, eds.: Sourcebook of Criminal Justice Statistics, Table 3.149.2008" (PDF). Retrieved 2012-03-28.
  7. ^ Barry Reilly, Neil Rickman, Robert Witt, Robbing Banks: Crime does pay – but not very much Significance Volume 9, Issue 3, pages 17–21, June 2012
  8. ^ "U.S. Code › Title 18 › Part I › Chapter 103 › §2113 - Bank Robbery". Cornell Law School Legal Information Institute.
  9. ^ New York Times, 19 March 2010 Today In History
  10. ^ Society (16 March 2013). "First Bank Robbery in United States – The Saturday Evening Post". The Saturday Evening Post. Retrieved 5 March 2017.
  11. ^ . Archived from the original on February 11, 2001. Retrieved 5 March 2017.
  12. ^ a b Braswell, Sean (25 October 2015). "The First American Bank Robbery Was One of the Most Bizarre Heists of All Time". OZY. Retrieved 5 March 2017.
  13. ^ Baxter, Carol Breaking the Bank: An Extraordinary Colonial Robbery, Allen & Unwin, Crows Nest, 2008
  14. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2017-03-06.
  15. ^ "Robbing the Bank: Australia's First Bank Robbery | the Dictionary of Sydney".
  16. ^ "New York Times, 16 Dec-1863". The New York Times. 1863-12-16. Retrieved 2012-03-28.
  17. ^ Mulligan, Frank. "Fact tops fiction in story of country's best bank robber". The State Journal-Register. Retrieved 2024-01-04.
  18. ^ Axel Breidahl & Axel Kjerulf, Københavnerglimt – 1912 – 1920, 1938, p. 41.
  19. ^ "The Non-Existent Frontier Bank Robbery | Larry Schweikart". January 2001.
  20. ^ "The Truth About Wild West Bank Robberies". 9 February 2021.
  21. ^ "Jesse James – First Bank Robbery". Biography. Retrieved 5 March 2017.
  22. ^ . 22 December 1996. Archived from the original on 22 December 1996. Retrieved 5 March 2017.
  23. ^ "Kansas City Tourist Office". Visitkc.com. Retrieved 2012-03-28.
  24. ^ Settle, William A. (1977). Jesse James Was His Name, by William A Settle Jr. U of Nebraska Press. ISBN 978-0803258600. Retrieved 2012-03-28.
  25. ^ . Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers. Lib. of Congress. 1909-08-19. Archived from the original on December 8, 2015. Retrieved 2015-12-04.
  26. ^ . 2001-03-10. Archived from the original on October 24, 2008. Retrieved 2012-03-28.
  27. ^ "The Bonnot Gang". Freedom News. 19 November 2012. Retrieved 5 March 2017.
  28. ^ "Happy Anniversary: Manhole covers held to ransom". independent. 20 December 1993. Retrieved 5 March 2017.
  29. ^ "A helicopter believed used in the daring datmylight robbery..." UPI. 21 February 1984. Retrieved 29 May 2023.
  30. ^ "History of Bank Robberies – Crime Museum". Crime Museum. Retrieved 5 March 2017.
  31. ^ "Movie Camera Solves Bank Robbery Quickly". Retrieved 29 May 2023.
  32. ^ Adorjan, Michael, Tony Christensen, Benjamin Kelly, and Dorothy Pawluch. "Stockholm Syndrome As Vernacular Resource." The Sociological Quarterly 53.3 (2012): 454–74. SocINDEX with Full Text [EBSCO]. Web. 23 Oct. 2016.
  33. ^ Adorjan, Michael; Christensen, Tony; Kelly, Benjamin; Pawluch, Dorothy (2012). "Stockholm Syndrome As Vernacular Resource". The Sociological Quarterly. 53 (3): 454–474. doi:10.1111/j.1533-8525.2012.01241.x. ISSN 0038-0253. JSTOR 41679728. S2CID 141676449
  34. ^ Roth, Cheyna (2023-12-28). "My Favorite Victorian Criminal Was a Bank Robber With a Secret Weapon". Slate. ISSN 1091-2339. Retrieved 2024-01-04.
  35. ^
  36. ^ Coyle, Daniel (2009). The Talent Code. Bantam Books. pp. 159. ISBN 978-0-553-80684-7.
  37. ^ "Design of a GPS/GSM currency tracker device" (PDF). Inside GNSS. Retrieved 2012-03-28.
  38. ^ "Bank Crime Statistics 2011". FBI. Retrieved 5 March 2017.
  39. ^ Baker, Billy (September 18, 2010). . The Boston Globe. Archived from the original on March 4, 2016. Retrieved December 9, 2016.

External links edit

  • FBI Bank Crime Statistics 2010
  • FBI Releases New Bank Robbers Mobile App

bank, robbery, bank, heist, redirects, here, video, game, bank, heist, atari, 2600, bank, robber, redirects, here, film, bank, robber, film, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these,. Bank heist redirects here For the video game see Bank Heist Atari 2600 Bank robber redirects here For the film see Bank Robber film This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages The examples and perspective in this article may not represent a worldwide view of the subject You may improve this article discuss the issue on the talk page or create a new article as appropriate November 2017 Learn how and when to remove this message This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Bank robbery news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2016 Learn how and when to remove this message Learn how and when to remove this message Bank robbery is the criminal act of stealing from a bank specifically while bank employees and customers are subjected to force violence or a threat of violence This refers to robbery of a bank branch or teller as opposed to other bank owned property such as a train armored car or historically stagecoach It is a federal crime in the United States A masked man poses as a bank robber during a demonstration of a German device that protected cash and sounded an alarm during a robbery 1931 According to the Federal Bureau of Investigation s Uniform Crime Reporting Program robbery is the taking or attempting to take anything of value from the care custody or control of a person or persons by force or threat of force or violence or by putting the victim in fear 1 By contrast burglary is unlawful entry of a structure to commit a felony or theft Contents 1 Overview 1 1 Places 1 2 Characteristics 2 Federal Statute 3 History 3 1 Early examples 3 2 Bank robbery on the American frontier 3 3 First known use of a getaway car 3 4 First known use of a helicopter 3 5 Great Depression era and Public Enemy 3 6 First known use of camera footage to apprehend a bank robber 3 7 Stockholm syndrome 3 8 Historical bank robbers 4 Prevention 5 In film 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksOverview editPlaces edit Bank robbery occurs in cities and towns This concentration is often attributed to there being more branches in urban areas but the number of bank robberies is higher than the number of branches citation needed This has advantages both for bank robbers and for law enforcement In urban areas the transportation infrastructure is more highly developed especially where banks tend to cluster near retail shopping areas and commercial districts Such banks are highly profitable targets for robbers who are then afforded a number of potential escape routes Law enforcement benefit by being able to respond more quickly and the odds of catching a bank robber on or near the scene is higher than other types of crime This is because most bank robberies are reported very quickly while the crime is in progress most bank robberies occur during daylight hours have multiple witnesses and with modern technology often produce photographic images that can be distributed and used immediately to canvass the local area Consequently many bank robbers are caught the same day The clearance rate for bank robbery is among the highest of all crimes at nearly 60 2 The urban location of the crime also contributes to its repeat victimization profile a measure of how quickly a crime victim will suffer a repeat of the original crime One study carried out by the Home Office found that in England one third of banks at which a robbery has occurred will be robbed again within three months while the same study found that in Tallahassee Florida one quarter of robbed banks will suffer repeat robbery within a week and over half of robbed banks will be robbed again within a month 3 Characteristics edit The Australian Institute of Criminology analyzed trends in bank robbery over a four year period Of the 808 bank robbery incidents between January 1998 and May 2002 in which the number of offenders involved in the hold up was recorded 55 were committed by lone offenders 25 by pairs and 20 by three or more robbers Unarmed offenders accounted for 28 of robberies caused the fewest injuries to victims one percent of all victims injuries were the type of robber who most often used a note to threaten bank staff 46 of all their robberies and failed most often in their robbery attempts 33 failure Unarmed gangs inflicted the most injuries to victims 51 and failed the least in their robbery attempts 6 failure Armed robbers used a disguise more often compared to unarmed robbers with armed pairs employing disguises most often 59 4 According to the Sourcebook of Criminal Justice Statistics injuries occur in about two percent and a death occurs in less than one percent of all U S bank robberies 5 6 Violent takeover bank robberies that are often portrayed in the media are rare The majority of bank robberies taking place today are so called note jobs These are usually accomplished by simply passing a written note to the teller demanding money The idea is to attract as little attention as possible In most cases other customers present in the bank during a robbery are unaware of what is occurring Standard bank policy is to avoid violence as much as possible so they will normally hand over the money and try to obey the robber s demands The robber usually makes away with cash but in small amounts According to British Bankers Association data in 2007 there were 106 attempted or successful robberies in Britain in which an average of 1 6 persons were involved One third of attempts came up empty while the average haul for a successful attempt was equivalent to US 46 600 Yet 20 of the successes would later prove less than successful by virtue of the robbers being arrested 7 Federal Statute editUnder federal law bank robbery in the United States is defined and made illegal primarily by the bank robbery statute in 18 U S C 2113 states 8 History edit nbsp Patty Hearst takes part in the April 1974 Hibernia Bank raid with other SLA members Early examples edit According to The New York Times and the Saturday Evening Post the first bank robbery in the United States occurred in March 1831 the 19th according to the Times the 20th according to the Post Two men James Honeyman and William J Murray entered the City Bank of New York using forged keys This allowed them to empty the vault of more than 245 000 in bank money According to the Times it cannot be confirmed if this was a robbery or a burglary 9 The Post later corrected this claim upon learning of a previous 1798 robbery of 162 821 from the Bank of Pennsylvania at Carpenters Hall 10 11 The Carpenters Hall theft also may not have technically been a robbery as there were no signs of force and the thief may have had a key 12 On September 14 1828 five men tunneled through a sewage drain in George Street Sydney and stole approximately 14 000 in promissory notes and coins from the vault of the Bank of Australia It has been described as the first bank robbery in Australia and also the largest in Australian history 13 14 15 On December 15 1863 Postmaster Edward Green walked into the First National Bank on Pleasant Street in Malden Massachusetts shot the 17 year old bookkeeper Frank Converse and stole 3 000 in large bills and 2 000 in small bills The directors of the bank offered a 6 000 reward for the arrest of the murderer 16 This has been described as the first armed bank robbery murder in US history 12 The crime is detailed in the historical fiction novel Abel Bodied Murder at the Malden Bank written by Michael Cloherty On October 27 1878 the Manhattan Savings Institution was robbed It was the largest bank robbery in U S history 17 The heist known as the 1907 Tiflis bank robbery in June 1907 in the Russian Empire resulted in 40 deaths 50 injuries and the expropriation of 341 000 rubles approximately 3 96 million 2018 US dollars by Bolsheviks organized by among others Vladimir Lenin and Joseph Stalin The first bank robbery in Denmark occurred August 18 1913 in the bank Sparekassen for Kobenhavn og Omegn at Osterbro in Copenhagen Two men Danish salesman Lindorff Larsen and a German machinist Guttig armed with revolvers got away with 9000 Danish kroner Guttig was arrested August 30 and Lindorff Larsen committed suicide after having fled the police 18 Bank robbery on the American frontier edit Bank robbery is commonly associated with the American Old West due to a few infamous examples and portrayal in fiction The Foundation for Economic Education FEE in their research found the scene of the Western bank robbery to be generally a myth identifying less than 10 definite bank robberies between 1859 and 1900 across 15 frontier states 19 Grunge com pointed out that FEE s research was conducted before many states and the Library of Congress began publishing historical newspapers online and while bank robberies in the Old West were still uncommon there were many more than previously assessed 20 On February 13 1866 several men believed to be members of the James Younger Gang robbed the Clay County Savings Association in Liberty Missouri shooting to death an innocent street bystander 17 year old student George Clifford Jolly Wymore and escaping with 60 000 This was the first successful daylight bank robbery during peacetime in the US 21 22 23 Previous robberies such as from the banks in St Albans Vermont more than a year earlier were perpetrated by Confederate soldiers which some historians consider to be not robberies proper but acts of war 24 First known use of a getaway car edit The August 29 1909 edition of The Rich Hill Tribune contained a front page news story entitled Bank Robbers in Motor Car and according to which two robbers used a gun to rob the Valley bank of Santa Clara of 7 000 They then used a hired automobile to escape and were chased by police and a posse of citizens also in automobiles eventually leading to their capture 25 On December 21 1911 two armed men of the Bonnot Gang intercepted a bank messenger outside a branch of Societe Generale in Paris They stole a satchel of money he was about to deliver to the bank containing roughly five thousand pounds and escaped in a stolen vehicle 26 This was the first successful use of a getaway car in a bank robbery 27 28 First known use of a helicopter edit On February 16 1984 more than 160 000 was stolen from the Merchants and Farmers Bank and Trust Co in Leesville Louisiana using a stolen getaway helicopter 29 Great Depression era and Public Enemy edit The 1920s and 1930s saw a significant increase in bank robberies in the United States This led to the formation of the Federal Bureau of Investigation FBI and the designation Public Enemy for significant wanted criminals 30 This era saw the rise of famous gangs such as the Dillinger Gang the Barrow Gang 1932 1934 and the Barker Karpis gang Other famous public enemies included Pretty Boy Floyd Public Enemy No 1 in 1934 and Machine Gun Kelly First known use of camera footage to apprehend a bank robber edit In 1957 security cameras installed at St Clair Savings and Loan in Cleveland recorded the first film footage used to apprehend and identify bank robbers The robbery occurred on April 12 when a 24 year old male pointed a gun at a teller while his accomplice an 18 year old female stuffed over 2 000 into a bag A third accomplice drove the getaway car The three were captured shortly after video footage of the robbery aired on national news 31 Stockholm syndrome edit In 1973 four hostages were taken during the Norrmalmstorg robbery in Stockholm Sweden After their release the hostages defended their captors and refused to testify against them This led to an academic interest in a phenomenon soon after referred to as Stockholm syndrome wherein hostages during captivity paradoxically form a sympathetic bond with their captors as a survival strategy 32 Stockholm syndrome is a contested illness due to doubt about the legitimacy of the condition 33 Historical bank robbers edit Main article List of bank robbers and robberies George Leonidas Leslie 1842 June 4 1878 was involved in 80 of the bank robberies in the U S from 1869 to his death in 1878 He was involved in the Manhattan Savings Institution robbery 34 Jesse James September 5 1847 April 3 1882 was one of the most notorious bank robbers in American history Ned Kelly December 1854 11 November 1880 Australian bushranger and folk hero pulled off a series of bank robberies in Victoria and New South Wales Herman Lamm April 19 1890 December 16 1930 The first modern bank robber who developed techniques of surveillance and planning such as casing and getaway maps used by many latter stick up men such as John Dillinger Bonnie Parker and Clyde Barrow better known as Bonny and Clyde active February 1932 May 1934 were an American couple who went on a crime spree during the Great Depression with their associates the Barrow Gang They captured the public imagination with their image as a wild young couple Along with their gang they were credited with only ten bank robberies often making away with as little as 80 They were eventually ambushed and killed on the roadside outside Bienville Parish Louisiana by a posse of Texas and Louisiana lawmen John Dillinger June 22 1903 July 22 1934 robbed banks in the Midwestern United States Some considered him a dangerous criminal while others idolized him as a present day Robin Hood He gained this latter reputation and the nickname Jackrabbit for his graceful movements during bank heists such as leaping over the counter a movement he supposedly copied from the movies and many narrow getaways from police On July 22 1934 FBI agents cornered Dillinger in an alley outside a movie theater in Chicago Illinois where he was shot and killed by multiple agents George Baby Face Nelson December 6 1908 November 27 1934 was a bank robber and former associate of John Dillinger He is notable for having killed more FBI agents in the line of duty than any other person He was killed in a shootout known as The Battle of Barrington outside Chicago Edwin Alonzo Boyd April 2 1914 May 17 2002 was a Canadian bank robber and leader of the Boyd Gang which pulled off a string of heists including the largest in Toronto history Clarence Anglin and brother John Anglin the infamous Alcatraz escapees robbed a bank in Alabama In the early 20th century Willie Sutton June 30 1901 November 2 1980 was asked why he robbed banks and he was famously reported as answering Because that s where the money is This is in fact a quote invented by the interviewer to make the story more interesting 35 However when asked Sutton did write this statement and autograph it for his physician so in a sense it is accurate Prevention editIn the 1920s American banks added the security of alarm systems and concrete reinforced blast proof vaults 36 nbsp Expended dye pack after a Los Angeles area Bank of America robbery January 2 2008 This particular pack was concealed inside a stack of twenty dollar bills Modern banks have implemented modern security measures like motion sensing and high resolution color security cameras time locked heavy vault doors silent alarms exploding dye packs bait money and GPS tracking devices Some banks supplement this protection with armed or unarmed security guards 37 Today s biometric technology makes non violent methods of gaining access even by the most experienced safe hackers and code crackers nearly impossible Modern vaults and safes are also reinforced to the point that the amount of explosives needed to blow them open would likely create unwanted attention and run the risk of harming the building to the point of collapse By their very nature even the most impregnable vault or safe eventually needs to be able to be opened and closed by someone To circumvent vault and safe security features robbers often kidnap the bank manager but that is not always a successful idea as banks have often removed the manager s ability to open the vault The police have new measures at their disposal to catch bank robbers such as well armed SWAT teams Forensic identification techniques have also improved greatly should a bank robber fire a gun the police can trace the bullet to the exact firearm using ballistic fingerprinting Martin Kemp in a BBC documentary once inquired on the effectiveness of an Uzi in a bank robbery to which the firearms training instructor joked that would be sixty four pieces of evidence to convict you The sawed off shotgun a common robbery weapon in the United Kingdom Australia and New Zealand where handguns are difficult to obtain is easily concealable but not particularly effective While it is not certain that the first time someone robs a bank they will be caught if they continue to rob banks they will most likely be caught Few criminals are able to make a successful living out of bank robbery over the long run Bank robberies are still fairly common and are indeed successful although eventually many bank robbers are found and arrested A report by the Federal Bureau of Investigation 38 states that among Category I serious crimes the arrest rate for bank robbery in 2001 was second only to that of murder Today most organized crime groups tend to make their money by other means such as extortion drug trafficking gambling prostitution loan sharking identity theft or online scamming and phishing A further factor making bank robbery unattractive for criminals in the United States is the severity with which it is prosecuted United States Federal Sentencing Guidelines for bank robbery gives long prison terms which are usually further enhanced by the use or carrying of loaded firearms prior criminal convictions and the absence of parole from the federal prison system As with any type of robbery the fact that bank robbery is also inherently a violent crime typically causes corrections administrators to place imprisoned bank robbers in harsher high security institutions In film editBank robberies are often a main plot in many heist films Some of these films are based on the lives of historic bank robbers such as Bonnie and Clyde 1967 Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid 1969 The Newton Boys 1998 and Public Enemies 2009 based on the life of John Dillinger Dog Day Afternoon 1975 Set It Off 1996 and The Bank Job 2008 are based on actual bank robberies Other notable but fictional examples include Point Break 1991 Heat 1995 Henry s Crime 2010 and The Town 2010 In The Town bank robbery is described as an element of life for residents of Charlestown a neighborhood in Boston However this is exaggerated and is disputed by residents of Charlestown who describe it as outdated as of when the film The Town was made Up to the early 2000s Charlestown was notorious for criminals whose specialty was robbery but also other lucrative crimes 39 See also edit nbsp Banks portal Armored car valuables Convenience store crimeReferences edit Bank Robbery Retrieved 5 March 2017 Bank Robbery January 2007 Retrieved 23 March 2023 Crime prevention GOV UK Archived from the original on 12 December 2009 Retrieved 5 March 2017 Australian Institute of Criminology Russell G Smith Archived from the original on 14 February 2017 Retrieved 5 March 2017 Pastore Ann L and Kathleen Maguire eds Sourcebook of Criminal Justice Statistics Table 3 151 2008 PDF Retrieved 2012 03 28 Pastore Ann L and Kathleen Maguire eds Sourcebook of Criminal Justice Statistics Table 3 149 2008 PDF Retrieved 2012 03 28 Barry Reilly Neil Rickman Robert Witt Robbing Banks Crime does pay but not very much Significance Volume 9 Issue 3 pages 17 21 June 2012 U S Code Title 18 Part I Chapter 103 2113 Bank Robbery Cornell Law School Legal Information Institute New York Times 19 March 2010 Today In History Society 16 March 2013 First Bank Robbery in United States The Saturday Evening Post The Saturday Evening Post Retrieved 5 March 2017 America s First Bank Robbery Archived from the original on February 11 2001 Retrieved 5 March 2017 a b Braswell Sean 25 October 2015 The First American Bank Robbery Was One of the Most Bizarre Heists of All Time OZY Retrieved 5 March 2017 Baxter Carol Breaking the Bank An Extraordinary Colonial Robbery Allen amp Unwin Crows Nest 2008 My Heritage Australia family tree Genealogy Family Search PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2017 03 06 Robbing the Bank Australia s First Bank Robbery the Dictionary of Sydney New York Times 16 Dec 1863 The New York Times 1863 12 16 Retrieved 2012 03 28 Mulligan Frank Fact tops fiction in story of country s best bank robber The State Journal Register Retrieved 2024 01 04 Axel Breidahl amp Axel Kjerulf Kobenhavnerglimt 1912 1920 1938 p 41 The Non Existent Frontier Bank Robbery Larry Schweikart January 2001 The Truth About Wild West Bank Robberies 9 February 2021 Jesse James First Bank Robbery Biography Retrieved 5 March 2017 The James Younger Gang Robberies 22 December 1996 Archived from the original on 22 December 1996 Retrieved 5 March 2017 Kansas City Tourist Office Visitkc com Retrieved 2012 03 28 Settle William A 1977 Jesse James Was His Name by William A Settle Jr U of Nebraska Press ISBN 978 0803258600 Retrieved 2012 03 28 Bank Robbers in Motor Car Chronicling America Historic American Newspapers Lib of Congress 1909 08 19 Archived from the original on December 8 2015 Retrieved 2015 12 04 The Bonnot Gang by Richard Parry 2001 03 10 Archived from the original on October 24 2008 Retrieved 2012 03 28 The Bonnot Gang Freedom News 19 November 2012 Retrieved 5 March 2017 Happy Anniversary Manhole covers held to ransom independent 20 December 1993 Retrieved 5 March 2017 A helicopter believed used in the daring datmylight robbery UPI 21 February 1984 Retrieved 29 May 2023 History of Bank Robberies Crime Museum Crime Museum Retrieved 5 March 2017 Movie Camera Solves Bank Robbery Quickly Retrieved 29 May 2023 Adorjan Michael Tony Christensen Benjamin Kelly and Dorothy Pawluch Stockholm Syndrome As Vernacular Resource The Sociological Quarterly 53 3 2012 454 74 SocINDEX with Full Text EBSCO Web 23 Oct 2016 Adorjan Michael Christensen Tony Kelly Benjamin Pawluch Dorothy 2012 Stockholm Syndrome As Vernacular Resource The Sociological Quarterly 53 3 454 474 doi 10 1111 j 1533 8525 2012 01241 x ISSN 0038 0253 JSTOR 41679728 S2CID 141676449 Roth Cheyna 2023 12 28 My Favorite Victorian Criminal Was a Bank Robber With a Secret Weapon Slate ISSN 1091 2339 Retrieved 2024 01 04 Willie Sutton Coyle Daniel 2009 The Talent Code Bantam Books pp 159 ISBN 978 0 553 80684 7 Design of a GPS GSM currency tracker device PDF Inside GNSS Retrieved 2012 03 28 Bank Crime Statistics 2011 FBI Retrieved 5 March 2017 Baker Billy September 18 2010 Robbed of its new image Charlestown hopes not Affleck s new film is the talk of the Townies The Boston Globe Archived from the original on March 4 2016 Retrieved December 9 2016 External links editFBI Bank Crime Statistics 2010 FBI Releases New Bank Robbers Mobile App Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bank robbery amp oldid 1220988422, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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