Sunday, April 1, 2012

Burglaries Bungled by the Law


Humorous stories abound about bungling burglars. Some guy attempts to rob a bank without a mask, the word E A S T S I D E tattooed on his upper lip. Probably should tattoo D U M B-A * * across his forehead. 

The Law managed to bungle a few cases over the decades, also. It’s bad enough when the loss amounts to millions, but then someone writes a book or makes a movie about it. What ever happened to D.B. Cooper? 

Many train robberies have never been solved. Included on England’s list is The Great Train Robbery of 1855. And again in 1963 when fifteen guys remembered to don their masks before they stopped the train in Buckinghamshire and got away with 2.5 million pounds in used bank notes.

Jimmy “The Gent” Burke masterminded New York’s Lufthansa Air Terminal robbery in 1978, making off with untraceable currency amounting to six million dollars. Someone probably lost their job over that.

Worse, in 1990, two police officers responded to a disturbance at the Boston Museum. On admittance, they cuffed the security guards and left with Degas and Rembrandt paintings worth 300 million dollars.

Which 1990 movie title renamed mobsters "decent chaps"?

22 comments:

  1. Very interesting, especially since here in the Ozarks we just heard of the arrest of a "fugitive British security guard suspected of absconding with a van containing $1.5 million in a 1993 heist." It was discovered that he had been living with his family in Missouri under an assumed name for 15 years.

    You never know who your neighbor really is! :-))

    Doris

    ReplyDelete
  2. Those are some amazing robberies. Talk about bold and thinking on your feet. Was it Good Fellas? That is one of my favorite movies of all time. ;)

    ReplyDelete
  3. There was one in the town of Macon (my home town) where the guy robbed a bank and rode off on a bike. Then a couple of months later he got on a comedy club stage and confessed. Not the brightest tool in the shed to say the least.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Hi, Yeah, every once in awhile we hear how someone goofed up a robbery and did something like leaving his "hand over the money" note on the back of an envelope with his name and address on the front. Duh!]
    Enjoyed your post.
    Ruby

    ReplyDelete
  5. I'm guessing Goodfellas as well. And now I need to look up the movie I saw years ago with Phil Collins as a robber...

    ReplyDelete
  6. It's the clever ones that never get caught and they say that the brilliant ones are the ones who know when to stop... not that I have any experience in this area of course!!!

    I'm blogging the A to Z Challenge too at A to Z of Nostalgia

    ReplyDelete
  7. Wow! The audacity of the last one, the art robbers, is just something else.

    ReplyDelete
  8. Excellent posts, both A and B. Love gangster stories, and heist flicks!

    Check out my A-Z Fun. A word a day!

    ReplyDelete
  9. It is indeed 'Goodfellas.' I really like that movie and even know where they got the name, "He's one of us. He's a good fella."
    Jimmy "the Gent"-was that Jimmy Conway from "Goodfellas?"
    Speaking of writing a book: "How I Did It" by OJ.

    ReplyDelete
  10. Doris, so often criminals secret themselves away and live off their stolen money. It's good to hear when one gets caught!

    Mel, yes, Goodfellas. I've watched the DVD so many times it is beginning to skip like a 45 rpm record!

    ReplyDelete
  11. K.D., I love your story about the guy who confessed on stage!

    Ruby, your comment reminds me of the bank robber who used the back of his check deposit slip. Great minds ...

    Thank you for all your comments, everyone. Yes, Al, Jimmy "The Gent" is from Goodfellas.

    ReplyDelete
  12. Interesting. I love the idiot crook stories, too. You know the kind like the one where someone stole a guy's marijuana stash, so he called the cops to report it.

    ReplyDelete
  13. This was very interesting. I cannot help but admire the ones who got away with it.

    ReplyDelete
  14. Have to wonder if these "bungling cops" were on the take. Many of these art heists are very suspicious.

    ReplyDelete
  15. Those great stories keep inspiring hope in getting away with the big one! I just signed on to the A-Z challenge, nearly at the last minute, but I'm trying to visit every blog at least once.

    ReplyDelete
  16. Bungling burglars and bungled busts -- a great post for the letter B. :)

    Marian Allen
    Fantasies, mysteries, comedies, recipes

    ReplyDelete
  17. @Donna, that is a funny story about the stolen stash. Guess not all of it was stolen!

    @Anthony, I have an upcoming post that addresses your comment about admiring the bad guys!

    @Stephen, from what I've read, the cops weren't only in on it, they got a cut of the take.

    We gamble to win (but lose) so we root for the guys who do make a killing (figuratively, speaking.)

    ReplyDelete
  18. What an entertaining "B" post! So glad to have met you through A to Z! Julie

    ReplyDelete
  19. This reminds me of the time I bungled a theft. I was 6 and went to take a Snickers without asking. I pocketed it in haste and it fell out in full view of a gun toting security guard. He was very nice. He pulled out his gun and showed it to me, explaining that if I kept up my thieving ways, I might one day be shot with one like it. He placed it on a shelf nearby as he explained at length the great virtue of honesty. He walked away...and left his gun on the shelf, forgotten. I took it. I still have that gun on my mantel as a reminder to never steal.

    Elton Says Things...

    ReplyDelete
  20. I love all those dumb criminal stories. Great, informative post. And to pack it all in those 200 words... Very well done indeed!

    Thanks so much for the visit! I look forward to reading more from you. :)

    Alana @ writercize.blogspot.com
    Blogging along A to Z with you!

    ReplyDelete
  21. wow, it's surprising how many go unsolved. It's just as amazing how many really dumb bungles there are..hehe.

    ReplyDelete
  22. Love the theme for your A to Z challenge. :) Luckily, it seems that most of the time it's the robbers doing the bungling instead of the cops, lol.

    ReplyDelete

Aloha and thank you for visiting today! Feel free to tweet or share any posts of interest.