There's really not much to say since i would rather you get to know me, and i'd like to meet you too. :)
But, the things i love are: my amazing friens and family, Summer and almost everything that comes with it, cricketl & table tennis, red,yellow and light blue, snow, and probably a billion more...
This article will examine ten tragic and unbelievable death videos. Many different types of events are included, with some clips showing assassinations, sports tragedies, natural disasters and aviation crashes. The list is Part 2 in a series of List Verse articles that examine the topic. In the original post, many people provided good examples of historic videos that could have been used. This article doesn’t include violent acts of suicide, such as the death of R. Budd Dwyer. It doesn’t show videos depicting violent murder, such as the last moments of American journalist Daniel Pearl’s life.
Some of the last videos to be removed from the article include the death of British speed racer Donald Campbell, the crash of FedEx Express Flight 80, the assassination of Pakistan Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto, the crash of Formula One champion Ayrton Senna, the Wikileaks footage of an American military helicopter firing in Baghdad and the tragic murder of Neda Agha-Soltan. The video of Neda Agha-Soltan getting shot has been called the most widely witnessed death in human history. It is a shocking piece of videotape.
10
John Thomson
Date: September 5, 1931
In the history of football, a number of tragic events have taken place on the pitch in which an athlete has been killed. Some notable occurrences include the death of Hungarian footballer Miklos Feher, Cameroonian international footballer Marc-Vivien Foe and Spanish player Antonio Puerta. We will be examining the loss of Scottish footballer John Thomson. In 1909, Thomson was born in Kirkcaldy and grew up in the mining community of Cardenden, in Fife. As John entered his teenage years, he began to stand out as a great footballer. Thompson caught the attention of Celtic F.C. manager Willie Maley, who was looking for a goalkeeper and heard of the young sensation from the east of Scotland.
After playing against Denbeath Star on October 30, 1926, John Thomson signed a professional contract with Celtic for £10 at the age of 17. He immediately stood out as a great keeper. John Thomson was known for his hard-nosed play and was willing to sacrifice his body for the good of the team. His first major injury happened on February 5, 1930, against Airdrie, in which Thomson broke his jaw, fractured many ribs, damaged his collarbone and lost two teeth. His friend Jim Ferguson asked “What was in your mind when you made the goal-saving dive”? John replied, “I had to go for it.”
On September 5, 1931, Celtic was playing their old rivals Rangers at Ibrox Stadium in Glasgow, in front of 80,000 spectators. Early in the second half of the game Thomson and Rangers player Sam English collided in the goalie box. During the play, John Thomson hit his head on Sam English’s knee, fracturing his skull and rupturing an artery in his right temple. John was rushed to the hospital with a deep depression in his skull. At 5pm he suffered a major convulsion and was pronounced dead later that evening. John Thomson was only 22-years-old. Around 30,000 people attended his funeral in Cardenden on September 9, 1931. Many of the mourners walked the journey of 55 miles from Glasgow. [Video Clip]
9
Emily Davison
Date: June 4, 1913
Emily Davison was a women’s suffrage activist who lived in England during the early 1900s. In 1906, she joined the Women’s Social and Political Union (WSPU) and immediately involved herself in their more militant activities. Davison was arrested and imprisoned for various offences in her life, including a violent attack on a man she mistook for the Chancellor of the Exchequer, David Lloyd George. She went on a hunger strike in Strangeways Prison, and jumped down an iron staircase in Holloway Prison. In Holloway, she landed on wire netting 30 feet (10 m) below the staircase, which saved her life. Emily suffered severe spinal damage in the fall. On June 4, 1913, Emily Davison attended the Epsom Derby in Surrey, England.
During a horse race, Emily Davison was trampled to death by King George V’s horse Anmer. She unexpectedly jumped in front of the animal at full speed. Pathe News captured the incident on film. Eyewitnesses at the time were divided as to Emily’s motivation, with many believing that Davison had simply intended to cross the track, thinking that all the horses had passed, while others reported that she had attempted to pull down the King’s horse. Emily Davison died four days after the collision, due to a fractured skull and internal injuries. Even today, it remains unclear if martyrdom was her intention. At the time of her death, Davison was carrying the banner of the WSPU. It has been suggested that she might have been attempting to attach the flag to Anmer. [Video Clip]
8
Hank Gathers
Date: March 4, 1990
Hank Gathers was an American college basketball star at Loyola Marymount University. After transferring from USC, Gathers helped lead the Lions to a 28–4 record in the 1988 basketball season. As a junior at Marymount, Hank Gathers became the second player in NCAA Division I history to lead the nation in scoring and rebounding in the same season, averaging 32.7 points and 13.7 rebounds per game. As a senior in 1989–90, he was a candidate for player of the year and had been projected as an NBA lottery pick. In the 1990 season, LMU averaged an astonishing 122.4 points per game, a record that is still held today.
At 6’7″ and 210 pounds, Gathers was Loyola Marymount’s strongest inside player. “I don’t care much about the points,” said Gathers. “In fact, I should lead the nation in scoring because of my rebounding. Anybody can score 30 points a night if that’s what he’s concentrating on, but rebounding is special because it comes from the heart.” Sadly, Hank Gathers first sign of health troubles came on Saturday, December 9, 1989, when he collapsed at the free-throw line during an LMU home game. He was found to have an abnormal heartbeat and was prescribed the beta blocker Inderal. However, Gathers felt the medication adversely affected his play, and he soon cut back on his dosage.
On Sunday, March 4, 1990, in Los Angeles, Gathers collapsed with 13:34 left in the first half of the WCC tournament quarterfinal game against Portland University, just after scoring a tomahawk dunk on an alley-oop pass from point guard Terrell Lowery that put the Lions up 25–13. The event was captured on video. After hitting the ground, Hank attempted to get up, telling the trainers, “I don’t want to lie down!”, then shortly after that he stopped breathing. Hank was declared dead on arrival at a nearby hospital. He was only 23-years-old. An autopsy found that he suffered from a heart-muscle disorder, hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. After his death, Gathers was named a consensus second team All-American and first team All-WCC selection for the season. He finished his career averaging 28.0 points per game and making 59% of his field goals. As his heart would show, Hank Gathers averaged 11.1 rebounds. [Video Clip]
7
Twilight Zone: The Movie
Date: July 23, 1982
Fatalities: 3 People
Twilight Zone: The Movie is a 1983 film produced by Steven Spielberg and John Landis as a theatrical version of the 1960s TV series created by Rod Serling. The 1983 film remade three classic episodes of the original series and included one original story. John Landis directed the prologue and the first segment, Steven Spielberg directed the second, Joe Dante the third, and George Miller directed the final segment. On July 23, 1982, an accident occurred while director John Landis filmed the Time Out scene of the movie, with actor Vic Morrow and child performers Myca Dinh Le (age 7) and Renee Shin-Yi Chen (age 6). During the scene, a helicopter crashed into the actors.
The helicopter lost control after a series of fireballs were released for pyrotechnic effects. One of the explosions caused the low-flying craft to spin out of control and land right on top of Morrow and the two children. Morrow and Myca were decapitated by the helicopter’s top rotor blades and Renee was impaled by one of the skids. All three of the actors were killed instantly. It was a big news story and evidence emerged that Myca and Renee were being paid under the table to get around California’s child-labor laws. The accident led to civil and criminal action against the filmmakers and John Landis.
In the proceedings, nobody was convicted or held criminally culpable for the accident. In the aftermath of the event, regulations were changed involving children working on movie sets and during special effect-heavy scenes. Unlike most deadly accidents that take place on film sets, the actual footage of the Twilight Zone crash has been released to the public. The video was widely used in the criminal trial. The clip shows a lawyer describing the sad day and then it shows the actual crash. The tragedy remains one of the worst accidents in the history of Hollywood. [Video Clip]
6
Ulrike Maier
Date: January 29, 1994
Ulrike Maier was a decorated Austrian alpine ski racer. She was born in Rauris and won the Super-G gold medal at the FIS Alpine World Ski Championships in both 1989 and 1991. She also won the giant slalom silver medal in 1991, and recorded 5 World Cup victories in her lifetime. On January 29, 1994, during a World Cup downhill race in Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Germany, Maier crashed while skiing at 120 km/h (75 mph) down the slope and broke her neck. She died shortly after being evacuated to the hospital in nearby Murnau. Ulrike Maier was only 26-years-old. Her fatal crash happened during a race which was broadcast on live television.
On June 24, 1994, a USAF B-52H bomber crew, stationed at Fairchild Air Force Base in Washington state, was scheduled for an aircraft demonstration flight. The crew consisted of pilots Lt Col Arthur “Bud” Holland, Lt Col Mark McGeehan, Col Robert Wolff, and weapon systems officer Lt Col Ken Huston. The flight plan called for a demanding series of low-altitude passes, 60 degree banked turns, a steep climb and a touch-and-go landing on Fairchild’s runway 23. The flight was Robert Wolff’s “fini flight”, a common tradition in which a retiring USAF aircrew member is met shortly after landing by relatives, friends and coworkers, and doused with water. As the B-52 took flight and prepared for the exercise, the aircraft was instructed to make a go-around because a KC-135 was on the runway.
Pilot Bud Holland radioed the control tower and asked for permission to execute a 360 degree left turn, which was immediately granted by the controller. To avoid restricted airspace, Holland directed the aircraft in an extremely tight, steeply banked turn while maintaining a low 250 foot (75 m) AGL altitude. Approximately three quarters of the way around the turn, the aircraft banked past 90 degrees, descended rapidly, and hit the ground. Upon impact, the plane exploded and killed all four crew members. McGeehan and Huston were able to eject before the crash, but both men were killed by the ensuing fireball.
It has been determined that pilot Bud Holland flew the aircraft beyond its operational limits. Unfortunately, it was not the first time in Holland’s career that he displayed poor judgment. The investigation concluded that the crash was due to a number a factors, including Holland’s personality and behavior. Also at fault was the Air Forces delayed reaction to earlier incidents involving Holland, and the sequence of events during the aircraft’s final flight. The crash is now used in military and civilian aviation environments as a case study in teaching crew resource management. After the incident, the video of the B-52 crash was widely distributed. [Video Clip]
4
Attack on the Dutch Royal Family
Date: April 30, 2009
Fatalities: 8 People
On April 30, 2009, the Dutch Royal Family was celebrating the national holiday of Koninginnedag with a parade in Apeldoorn, Netherlands, when a man drove his vehicle at a high speed into a crowd of people in the vicinity of Queen Beatrix and Prince Willem-Alexander. The vehicle hit a collection of citizens lining the street, leaving eight people dead and ten injured. The car missed the royal family and crashed into a monument at the side of the road. No members of the royal family were harmed. The attack was the first of its kind on the Dutch Royal Family in modern times. The driver was identified as 38-year-old Dutch national Karst Roeland Tates.
After being taken to the hospital, Tates died from his injuries. The attack occurred just before an open-top bus carrying the Dutch Royal Family made its last turn towards the palace of Het Loo in Apeldoorn. In the assassination attempt, Tates crashed his black Suzuki Swift into a large group of people, just missed the bus carrying the royals, and slammed into De Naald, which is a royal monument. The attack and subsequent search of the vehicle was viewed on live television. Even to this day, Tates’ motive for the event remains unclear. At a press conference, police reported that, while the suspect was still conscious, he told them he was attempting to kill the royal family. [Video Clip]
3
Dale Earnhardt
Date: February 18, 2001
Dale Earnhardt was an American race car driver, best known for his career in NASCAR’s top division. He is notable for his success in the Winston Cup Series (now the Sprint Cup Series), winning 76 races. Earnhardt’s seven championships are tied for most all-time with Richard Petty. On February 18, 2001, Dale Earnhardt was competing in the Daytona 500, a NASCAR-sanctioned automobile race held at Daytona International Speedway, in Florida. Coming into the final lap of the race, Earnhardt was running in third place. Ahead of him were two of his race team’s cars, the blue #15 driven by Michael Waltrip and the red #8 run by his son Dale Earnhardt Jr.
As the race progressed, Earnhardt was blocking the attempts of driver Sterling Marlin to pass. During the final lap of the race, Marlin and Earnhardt bumped, with the right front of Sterling’s car coming into contact with the left rear of Earnhardt’s. The contact caused Dale’s vehicle to veer off and turn sharply to the right. He collided with the wall at an estimated speed of 155 to 160 mph. Almost instantly, as the front of Earnhardt’s car made impact with the wall, the right-rear wheel assembly broke off the car, the passenger-door window blew out, and the hood pins severed, causing the hood to flap open and slam against the windshield. Dale Earnhardt was killed instantly in the crash.
The official cause of Dale Earnhardt’s death in the medical examiners autopsy report was listed as “blunt force injuries of the head”. In the aftermath of the accident, there were several safety improvements made in the sport of stock car racing. Many teams migrated from traditional five-point safety harnesses to a six-point unit. Two months later, after a crash during an ARCA race that killed driver Blaise Alexander, NASCAR finally mandated the use of head and neck restraints in all competition. The video of Dale Earnhardt’s final ride is chilling and a reminder of how dangerous car racing is. [Video Clip]
2
Hindenburg Disaster
Date: May 6, 1937
Fatalities: 36 People
An airship or dirigible is a type of “lighter-than-air aircraft” that can be steered using rudders and propellers. The airship uses a large “envelope” filled with gas to stay afloat. In the past, hydrogen gas was used, but nowadays helium is preferred because of its lack of flammability. Airships were the first aircraft to enable controlled, powered flight, and were widely used before the 1940s. Rigid airships are a type of airship that holds a full skeleton. They are meant for transportation. Rigid airships were used from the beginning of the 1900s to the end of the 1930s.
LZ 129 Hindenburg was a large German commercial passenger rigid airship that was designed and built by the Zeppelin Company. The Hindenburg was the longest (245 meters, 803.8 feet) and largest by volume (200,000 m3, 7,062,000 cubic feet) flying machine of its kind. After opening its 1937 season by completing a passage to Rio de Janeiro in late March, the Hindenburg departed from Frankfurt on the evening of May 3rd to complete its first of 10 round trips between Europe and the United States.
Around 7:00 p.m., at an altitude of 650 feet (200 m), the Hindenburg approached the Lakehurst Naval Air Station, in New Jersey. At 7:25pm, under bad weather conditions, witnesses reported seeing blue discharges and flames on the aircraft. It is unknown where the fire originated, but as the Hindenburg crashed into the ground, the hydrogen ignited and burned. Careful analysis of the event by Addison Bain of NASA, indicated that the rate of the fire was about 49 ft/s (15 m/s), resulting in a total destruction of 16 seconds. Five newsreel cameramen captured the crash on tape. Nobody was able to film the moment when the fire started.
The disaster was a major story in 1937. The news was spawned by the video footage and photographs, as well as the live eyewitness radio report of Herbert Morrison. Morrison’s broadcast remains one of the most famous in history. His words, “Oh, the humanity!” resonate with the impact of the disaster. Despite the violent fire, many of the crew and passengers survived the crash. Of the 97 people on the Hindenburg, 35 died. One person was killed on the ground, bringing the total fatalities to 36. The cause of the fire remains a mystery. However, a variety of hypotheses have been put forward, including the theory that a static spark ignited the hydrogen. The Hindenburg crash eliminated public confidence in passenger-carrying rigid airships. [Video Clip]
1
2004 Indian Ocean Earthquake and Tsunami
Date: December 26, 2004
Fatalities: 230,000 People
On December 26, 2004, an undersea megathrust earthquake occurred off the west coast of Sumatra, Indonesia. The earthquake triggered a series of devastating tsunamis along the coast of most landmasses bordering the Indian Ocean, killing over 230,000 people in fourteen countries. The event was one of the deadliest natural disasters in recorded history. Indonesia was the hardest hit, followed by Sri Lanka, India and Thailand. With a magnitude of between 9.1 and 9.3, the earthquake was the third largest ever recorded. Sadly, relief agencies reported that one-third of the casualties were children.
The 2004 earthquake was the biggest in the Indian Ocean in 700 years, or since around A.D. 1400. The event has been described as the deadliest natural disaster since the 1976 Tangshan earthquake and the 1970 Bhola cyclone. The Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami has caused an enormous amount of environmental problems. Severe damage has been reported in mangroves, coral reefs, forests, coastal wetlands, vegetation, sand dunes and rock formations. The Great Nicobar and Car Nicobar Islands were the worst hit among all the islands because of their proximity to the quake and relative flatness. Entire islands were washed away by the ocean, and the island of Trinket was split in two.
Communications are yet to be restored with the Nancowry group of islands. Some of the Nancowry Islands were completely submerged in the disaster. The tsunami also had a severe humanitarian and political impact in Sweden, which was the hardest hit country outside Asia. 543 Swedish tourists, mainly in Thailand, died in the event. The tsunami caused the Queen of the Sea rail disaster, which occurred when a crowded passenger train was destroyed on a coastal railway in Sri Lanka by the tsunami. More than 1,700 people died in the crash, making it the most deadly train wreck in history. A large number of people captured the tsunami on tape. This video includes a collection of separate clips. [Video Clip]
+
Jayan
Date: November 16, 1980
Krishnan Nair, better known by his stage name Jayan, was an Indian film actor who worked in Malayalam cinema. During his film career, Jayan was widely recognized for his elaborate stunts. He has been acclaimed as the first action hero of Malayalam cinema. In November of 1980, Jayan was working on the film Kolilakkam. He was shooting the climactic scene of the movie in Sholavaram, near Chennai, Tamil Nadu. The scene involved a dangerous stunt that had Jayan boarding an airborne helicopter from a motorbike. During the action, Jayan stood up on the moving motorcycle, jumped to the flying helicopter, and was in the process of entering the cab when the helicopter crashed and hit the ground.
At the time of the crash, Jayan was hanging from the helicopter. He was badly injured in the incident and later died from his injuries. After his death was confirmed, a slide was added to his movie Deepam, which was running to packed houses. The slide informed the viewers of his death. In response to the news, a large number of his fans burst into tears. The list of stunts performed by Jayan during his film career is impressive. In modern times, the expansion of the internet and video sharing has given him cult status.
The screen persona of Jayan made a comeback in early 2000s, with cartoons, emails and mimicry portraying him as a comic superhero. Since Jayan’s death, conspiracy theories have emerged regarding the circumstances of the crash, primarily because the pilot and his co-star Balan K. Nair, who were both in the helicopter, survived with minor or no injuries. The footage of Jayan completing the stunt can be viewed in the movie Kolilakkam. I have included the film scene. In the clip, you can see just how dangerous the stunt was and the circumstances that led to Jayan’s untimely death.
Everyone knows that these days, with our enhanced technology, such as CCTV and DNA evidence, being a successful criminal is almost impossible. Because of the over-glamorous heists portrayed by Hollywood, most people assume that, in reality, crimes are almost impossible to get away with it. However lots of high-value robberies or burglaries have been attempted in recent times, and many criminals do get away with it. I have described, here, some cases in which people have been able to successfully steal cash or objects of high value, without having to suffer the consequences. It goes to show that, on occasion, crime does pay.
10
French “Vacuum Gang”
Since 2006, in France, an unknown gang of thieves have been emptying supermarket safes, using nothing more than a drill and a modified vacuum cleaner. The innovative group of bandits found a weakness in French supermarket Monoprix’s system of storing cash, and have been exploiting it ever since. Envelopes of cash are funneled into the safe via pneumatic suction tubes. Whereas breaching the safe itself might be considerably difficult, requiring explosives or safecracking, the thieves realized that if they just drilled into the delivery tubes near the safe and hooked up a powerful vacuum, they could suck the money out and get at it much more easily.
This mode of robbery is very unique as most thieves would resort to safecracking methods, which leave more evidence. Techniques such as using explosives, or tools like a thermal lance or plasma cutter, are the common choice of career burglars. As of 2011, the vacuum gang have successfully stolen almost $800,000, in fifteen night-time heists, leaving only a few CCTV tapes of masked men for evidence.
9
2010 Credit Lyonnais Paris Burglars
On March 30th, 2010, burglars got into a Credit Lyonnais bank, in central Paris, and emptied over a hundred safety deposit boxes, getting away with millions of Euros in cash and valuables. The gang tunneled into the bank’s basement from a neighboring cellar, and entered the vault through a small hole they cut using a thermal lance. The branch itself was closed for renovations, however, a security guard who heard noises from the basement confronted the robbers, who lashed him to a chair and told him not to move. Meanwhile, the gang ransacked 125 safe deposit boxes over the course of a few hours. They then set fire to the premises to eliminate any evidence. The fire set off the sprinklers, which alerted the tied-up guard, who assumed the robbers had left, so he raised the alarm. The full operation took around nine hours. As of 2011, the thieves are still at large, and because of the lack of evidence it is unlikely they will ever be brought to justice. This raid bears similarities to the 1971 Baker Street burglary, and shows that security hasn’t improved over time as much as it should have.
8
Carl Gugasian
This particular criminal was successful in baffling police during a bank robbing career that spanned thirty years, and netted him over $2million. The reason he isn’t higher in the list is because of his eventual arrest. When Carl Gugasian was 15 years old, he was shot while attempting to rob a candy store and was sent to a State Youth Facility. After his release he took deliberate steps, not only to avoid a normal life, but to excel in a life of crime. He graduated from the University of Pennsylvania, earning a master’s degree in systems analysis. He also went out of his way to receive military weapons training.
Immediately after his graduation, Gugasian began to plan out mock robberies involving stolen cars. On eight separate occasions he was planning to commit his first bank robbery; however he repeatedly backed down before entering the bank. Eventually, he committed his first offense, using a stolen car for his getaway.
It was after this that he began to develop his unique bank robbery modus operandi, with such meticulous planning that police were powerless to stop him. He would first look for banks in small towns, that provide easy access to a freeway. He then narrowed the search further by looking for a bank that had late closing times, in August or winter months, so darkness could hide his escape. He only robbed banks on a Friday, which earned him the nickname: Friday Night Robber. He then created a cache to store any evidence that connected him to the crime (including the money), immediately after the robbery. He would return later to retrieve the stuff, when the heat had died down in the following weeks.
As for the robbery itself, Gugasian would burst into the bank five minutes before closing time, when customers weren’t likely to be there. Donning a gruesome face mask from a horror movie (Freddy Krueger was a favorite), he would vault the counter in a standing jump, landing with a crash on the other side, which terrified staff. He then grabbed everything he could from the cash tills, and left in less than two minutes. Immediately afterwards he would disappear into the well-scouted woods and run for several minutes to a dirt-bike. Then he would bike for a further few miles through the woods to an anonymous looking panel van, waiting on the other side, where he’d load the bike into the van and drive away to complete his escape.
In the end, despite his meticulous planning and execution, it was a simple case of bad luck that led to his arrest. Two young teenage boys found one of his caches whilst playing in the woods. It was full of weapons, ammunition and face masks which had his fingerprints. Only enough evidence existed to convict Gugasian of 5 bank robberies, resulting in a 17-year sentence, which he is currently still serving. Despite this, he has still gotten away with over 45 armed bank robberies; an amazing feat considering that, statistically, over 65% of armed bank robbery cases in the US are solved.
7
Paris Modern Art Museum Burglar
In May, 2010, a lone thief broke into the Paris Museum of Modern Art and stole masterpieces by artists such as Picasso and Matisse, valued at just under £100million. Unbelievably, the museum didn’t have a functioning burglar alarm, and the thief was able to simply smash a window and remove the pictures from their frames, without incident. The burglary was discovered at 7am the following morning. Although security guards were in the building at the time of the heist, they didn’t hear anyone enter, or notice the missing paintings or smashed window.
The crime was initially believed to be worth around £430million; however, this figure soon came down to just under £100million. Police have speculated that the paintings may have been “ordered” by a private collector, as this has been the case with previous art thefts in the city. As of 2011, no one has been arrested for the burglary and police believe that the painting is no longer in the possession of the thief. This theft is an example of very poor security around objects with extremely high value.
6
Derek “Bertie” Smalls
Bertie Smalls was an English armed robber who was active in the 1960s and 70s; a time considered the golden age of British armed robbery. Smalls committed his first robbery when he was 15, and, after being imprisoned for a short while, committed his life to crime. Before 1970, Smalls already had a string of high-profile robberies to his name, and was a respected figure in the London Underworld.
On the 9th February, 1970, Smalls led a gang from the Wembley Mob, in the East End of London, to rob a Barclays Bank branch in Ilford. The gang successfully got away with £237,736, a record at the time. Most of the team left England on various routes. Smalls, himself, boarded a train to Paris and from there went on to the Costa del Sol, where he read English newspapers looking for police updates about the robbery. The police made an early breakthrough, with an informant naming Smalls as the leader of the gang.
Smalls returned to England and gave himself up in Northampton, where he spent the Christmas period in jail. On June 2nd, Smalls asked for a meeting with the chief inspector. Smalls had been informed by his solicitor that he would be spending at least 25 years in prison. In an attempt to reduce his lengthy sentence, he offered the police a deal to turn over every person connected with any criminal activity he had ever been involved with.
Smalls was given immunity from prosecution in return for his help. At the Old Bailey, the trial of the Barclays Bank raid commenced, and Smalls testified against every one of his co-conspirators. As he finished giving evidence against his former friends, they reportedly sang to him: “We’ll meet again” by Vera Lynn. The trial ended with a jail time for the gang totaling over 100 years in prison. In the months after the trial, Smalls helped convict 21 more associates, for a total of over 300 years in prison. As a result, Bertie Smalls received no jail-time for his part in the Barclays raid, although there was rumored to be a £1million bounty on his head, instigated by powerful underworld figures such as the Kray twins. Despite this, he lived under police protection for the rest of his life. Even today, criminals who grass on their friends are said to be a “Bertie Smalls”. Pictured above is John Coyne portraying Bertie Smalls).
5
Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum Robbers
On the night of March 18th, 1990, two men, disguised as Boston police officers, entered the Isabella Stewart Gardner museum and stole an estimated $500,000,000 worth of artworks, including works by Rembrandt, Vermeer, Manet and Degas. They gained entry by impersonating Boston Police officers, and telling guards that they were responding to a call. Once inside, they rounded up the guards and handcuffed them, placing them in the basement whilst they raided the second floor of the museum. The next morning security arrived to relieve the guards, but instead found the museum ransacked.
The museum still has the empty frames hanging in place (see picture), as an homage to the stolen art, and to show their hope that they may one day see them returned to their rightful place. The criminals have never demanded a ransom, and they will never serve any time, even if they are caught, as the statute of limitations has run out. The museum has offered a $5million reward for information leading to the recovery of the artwork, and has also said they will: “ensure complete confidentiality”, implying they are willing to pay a ransom.
4
The School of Turin
At approximately 7pm local time, on Friday the 14th of February, 2003, the School of Turin were about to perform the largest diamond heist the world has ever seen. Leonardo Notarbartolo, the leader of the gang, had reportedly remained in the vault that Friday night when the security doors closed automatically, at 7:00 pm. Several hours later, the elevator leading down to the vault was purportedly used by three other members of the School. The motion detector at the foot of the elevator had already been disabled by an application of spray silicone, and the vault’s light detector had been rendered useless with a simple piece of tape. With all of the prep work done, the School of Turin found themselves alone with the vault of the Antwerp Diamond Center.
Gaining access to the vault was not the same, however, as gaining entrance. The vault itself was protected by a dual lock system: a combination and a key lock, and two feet of reinforced steel. The key part was easy, as duplicates of the key had been made in advance. The combination lock was a bit more difficult, and the police have yet to release information pertaining to exactly how this was cracked.
Buried behind those two locks was something else; a fail-safe alarm that consisted of magnets that would notify the police as soon as the vault was opened, and the magnets were no longer touching. The alarm was automatic and could not be turned off. The fail safe was defeated with the most minimalist of moves. The crack team of burglars snipped the magnets out of their resting places and taped them together, allowing the vault door to be opened without ever separating the magnets.
The taping of the magnets was the final step. There, in the vault, the School of Turin pried open that heavy door, knowing that they would be undisturbed as they gazed upon their jackpot, the largest diamond heist in history. For the remainder of the weekend, they set to breaking into safety deposit boxes. Out of the 160 security boxes, the highly skilled crew worked through 123, popping the locks with a tool they created specifically for the job. But these professionals didn’t merely grab diamonds, of which the trade is much more restricted than most would have you believe, no, they grabbed the paperwork necessary to sell the diamonds as legitimate. That which couldn’t easily be resold, and even currency, items with combined values totaling in the millions of dollars, were left carelessly on vault floor.
By the time the heist had been discovered the thieves were long gone. However, the alleged leader of the gang, Leonardo Notarbartolo, was convicted on the basis of DNA found on a half-eaten sandwich found near the crime-scene. He was sentenced to 10 years in prison. The other School members were never apprehended and it is unlikely they will be, as the statute of limitations has, or will soon, run out.
3
Baker Street Burglary
The Baker Street burglary took place in London, in 1971, when a team of well-equipped thieves tunneled into the Lloyds Baker Street Bank Vault and stole £3million (2011: £31.7million) worth of cash and valuables from safety deposit boxes. The criminals used a combination of metal cutting tools, such as a thermal lance and explosives, to tunnel into the vault from a nearby shop, and even had a lookout positioned on a rooftop. Near the end of the heist, a ham radio operator overheard some of the lookout’s walkie-talkie radio transmissions and contacted the police, who frantically searched over seven hundred banks within the area, in hopes of honing in on the location of the transmission. Policemen even searched the bank whilst the burglars were inside the vault, however, since no damage was visible on the vault door, police assumed they had the wrong bank and left. They were unable to catch the robbers at the time, but nearly two years later a number of men were charged in connection with the burglary. However, the true mastermind was a London car dealer, who was never apprehended. The story of the burglary has been immortalized in the semi-fictional movie “The Bank Job” starring Jason Statham.
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The Pink Panthers
The Pink Panthers are a Serbian gang of jewel thieves, who Interpol believe are responsible for some of the most glamorous armed robberies in history. Their bold style and intricate planning is thought of as artistry, even by criminologists. They have targeted many different countries, and have Japan’s most successful robbery among their thefts.
In 1993, the gang came to attention with their first robbery, when they stole a £500,000 diamond from a jeweler in London. The thieves hid the diamond in a jar of face cream resembling an act from the film: “Return of the Pink Panther” which earned them their nickname. Since then, the group have successfully robbed over one hundred and twenty different stores, in twenty different countries. Their attention to detail is the reason behind their high success rate. For example, before a heist in Biarritz, the gang coated a bench adjacent to the jewelry store in fresh paint to deter people sitting on it and seeing them in action.
The Pink Panthers are also known for their daring escapes and creative break-ins. In St Tropez, they robbed a store dressed in flowery shirts and then escaped on a speed boat. In another high-profile heist, the gang drove a pair of stolen limousines through a window into a Dubai mall, taking watches and other valuables worth over £8million. In yet another robbery, they dressed up as women and stole over $100million (£60million) worth of jewelry from a Harry Winston store in Paris, using Mission Impossible-style prosthetic make-up as a disguise.
Several gang members have been imprisoned. However, their group is thought to consist of over two hundred members, therefore, most have simply gotten away with their crimes. Their total haul is now believed to be in the billions of dollars. The alleged leader of the gang, Dragan Mikic, escaped from prison using a rope ladder, in 2005, whilst Pink Panthers fired machine guns at the prison wall. He has been on the run ever since.
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Albert Spaggiari
Albert Spaggiari was a French career criminal who is best known for masterminding the Societe Generale bank robbery in France, 1976. As a young man he committed his first robbery in order to impress his girlfriend, but was soon captured and imprisoned. After his release and having served in the French military, Spaggiari became the owner of a photographic studio and was making a reasonable living as a law-abiding citizen. However, he apparently became bored with his middle-class life and sought to return to a life of crime.
He began to plan a break-in at the Societe Generale Bank, in Nice. He decided that, since the bank vault was located in the basement, the break-in would best be achieved by digging underneath from a nearby sewer system. He opened a box for himself and placed a loud alarm clock inside, setting it to go off at midnight in order to check for the existence any acoustic or seismic detectors that might foil his plan. In fact, the bank vault had no interior alarm or security systems, as it was considered utterly impenetrable.
Spaggiari then recruited a group of professional gangsters from Marseille to help him dig the tunnel. He instructed them to never drink coffee or alcohol, and always to get at least 10 hours sleep every day to avoid danger to the mission. After two months of digging, the tunnel was finished, and, during a Bastille Day festival when the bank was closed for a long weekend, the gang broke into the vault, itself. They opened up over 400 safety deposit boxes, stealing over 60million francs worth of money, securities and other valuables.
When the robbery was discovered, the following message was found on the vault wall: “sans armes, ni maine, ni violence” which is translated as: “without weapons, nor hatred, nor violence”. At first police were baffled, however, in the following months they arrested one suspect on a tip from a former girlfriend. The man later admitted being a part of the robbery and ratted out the entire gang, including Spaggiari. During his trial, however, Spaggiari managed to escape by distracting the judge, by handing him a fake piece of encoded evidence. He jumped out of the window, where a motorcycle was waiting for him and made his getaway.
He was never caught and the loot from the heist was never found. He died at the age of 52 of throat cancer, and his body was found dumped outside his mother’s house, presumably by unknown friend