In April 2015, the Hatton Garden Safe Deposit Company, an underground safe deposit facility in London's Hatton Garden area, was burgled. The total stolen may have a value of up to £200 million, and the incident has been called the "largest burglary in English legal history."
The heist was planned and carried out by four elderly men who were experienced thieves, all of whom pleaded guilty and received prison sentences in March 2016. Four other men were also tried on suspicion of involvement; three were found guilty and sent to prison, while the fourth was cleared.
Video Hatton Garden safe deposit burglary
Burglary
The burglary occurred during a period in which the Easter Bank Holiday and Passover coincided. The police first announced that the facility had been burgled on 7 April, and reports based on CCTV footage state that the attack on the facility commenced on 2 April. The theft was so significant that the investigation was assigned to the Flying Squad, a branch of the Specialist, Organised & Economic Crime Command within London's Metropolitan Police Service.
There was no externally visible sign of a forced entry to the premises. It was reported that the burglars had entered the premises through a lift shaft, then drilled through the 50 cm thick vault walls with a Hilti DD350 industrial power drill.
On 8 April, press reports emerged speculating that a major underground fire in nearby Kingsway may have been started to create a diversion as part of the Hatton Garden burglary. The London Fire Brigade later stated that the fire had been caused by an electrical fault, with no sign of arson.
A CCTV recording of the incident was released by the Daily Mirror before the police released it. The video showed people nicknamed by the newspaper as "Mr Ginger, Mr Strong, Mr Montana, The Gent, The Tall Man and The Old Man".
On 22 April, the police released pictures of the inside of the vault showing damage caused by the burglary, and how the burglars had used holes drilled through the vault's wall to bypass the main vault door.
On 19 May, the Metropolitan Police announced that nine arrests had been made in connection with their investigation into the raid.
On 1 September 2015, it was announced that the Hatton Garden Safe Deposit Company had gone into liquidation as the business had become insolvent because "trade dried up" as a result of the robbery.
Maps Hatton Garden safe deposit burglary
Timeline
- On 1 April 2015, electrical cables under the pavement in Kingsway caught fire, leading to serious disruption in central London. The fire continued for the next two days, with flames shooting out of a manhole cover from a burst gas main, before being extinguished. Several thousand people were evacuated from nearby offices, and several West End theatres cancelled performances. There was also substantial disruption to telecoms infrastructure.
- 2 April: 21:19 staff lock doors for Easter weekend
- 2 April: 21:23 "Mr Ginger" descends to the vault, followed by three men pulling wheelie bins
- 3 April: 00:21 police at Scotland Yard are informed that the burglar alarm has been triggered
- 3 April: 08:05 gang members talk before going to their van and driving away
- 4 April: 21:17 "Mr Ginger" goes down into vault, and is later joined by two other men
- 5 April: 06:10 the gang members drive away from the building
- 7 April: Scotland Yard state they are aware of the burglary
- 10 April: The Daily Mirror releases CCTV footage
- 19 May: The Metropolitan Police announce that they have arrested nine suspects
- 28 March 2018: Another man was arrested
Arrests
On 19 May 2015, 76-year-old Brian Reader, who was previously involved in laundering the proceeds of the Brink's-Mat robbery, was arrested in connection with the burglary by Flying Squad officers.
In November 2015, Carl Wood, William Lincoln, Jon Harbinson and Hugh Doyle were all charged with conspiracy to commit burglary and conspiracy to conceal, convert or transfer criminal property. The theft was described as the "largest burglary in English legal history."
On 28 March 2018 Michael Seed, 57, was arrested after his home in Islington, London was searched. He was charged with conspiracy to burgle and conspiracy to conceal or disguise criminal property.
Sentencing
On 9 March 2016, at Woolwich Crown Court, three members of the gang, John "Kenny" Collins, Daniel Jones and Terry Perkins, were found guilty of conspiracy to commit burglary and were each given a seven-year prison term.
Carl Wood and William Lincoln were found guilty of the same offence and also one count of conspiracy to conceal, convert or transfer criminal property, after trial. Lincoln was also given a seven-year sentence, and Wood was jailed for six years.
Hugh Doyle was found guilty of concealing, converting or transferring criminal property. He was jailed for 21 months, suspended for two years.
Finally, the ringleader, Brian Reader, was sentenced to six years and three months in jail on 21 March 2016.
The eighth man, Jon Harbinson, was found not guilty and discharged.
In January 2018, John "Kenny" Collins, Daniel Jones, Terry Perkins and Brian Reader during a confiscation ruling at Woolwich Crown Court must pay a total of £27.5 million or face another seven years in jail. Perkins died in prison in February 2018, just a week after the ruling.
In television and film
The heist was one of the main features of the American investigative science web-TV series, White Rabbit Project, released on 9 December 2016. The programme sees the presenters investigate and demonstrate the methods used in the heist as well as featuring dramatised re-enactments. It is featured in series one, episode five, "Heist!".
A four-part mini-series, Hatton Garden, starring Kenneth Cranham and Timothy Spall, was due to broadcast on ITV from 11 December 2017, but has been postponed until early 2018.
The Heist was also the subject of two films, Hatton Garden: The Heist from 2016 and The Hatton Garden Job (aka One Last Heist) from 2017. A third film, Night in Hatton Garden starring Michael Caine and Ray Winstone is currently in production.
See also
- Antwerp Diamond Heist - dubbed the "heist of the century". The thieves stole loose diamonds, gold, and other jewellery valued at more than $100 million.
- Baker Street robbery - 1971 burglary of safe-deposit boxes from a bank in Baker Street, London.
- Schiphol Airport diamond heist - took place on 25 February 2005 with an estimated EUR75 million ($118 million) stolen.
- List of missing treasures
References
Further reading
- Tom Pettifor, Nick Sommerlad, One Last Job: the Extraordinary Life of Brian Reader, Britain's Most Prolific Thief (Mirror Books, 2016)
- Wensley Clarkson, Sexy Beasts: the Inside Story of the Hatton Garden Heist (Quercus Editions, 2016)
- Nigel Cawthorne, The Great Diamond Heist - The Incredible True Story of the Hatton Garden Robbery (2016)
External links
- Hatton Garden burglary at met.police.uk
- The Hatton Garden Job at bbc.co.uk
Source of article : Wikipedia