bank-robberies
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bank-robberies
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All credit to:WBen Macaulay 

RULES FOR BANK ROBBERS

    According to the FBI, most modern-day bank robberies are
"unsophisticated and unprofessional crimes," committed by young male
repeat offenders who apparently don't know the first thing about their
business.  This information was included in an interesting, amusing
article titles "How Not to Rob a Bank," by Tim Clark, which appeared in
the 1987 edition of The Old Farmers Almanac.

    Clark reported that in spite of the widespread use of surveillance
cameras, 76 percent of bank robbers use no disguise, 86 percent never
study the bank before robbing it, and 95 percent make no long-range
plans for concealing the loot.  Thus, he offered this advice to
would-be bank robbers, along with examples of what can happen if the
rules aren't followed:

1. Pick the right bank.  Clark advises that you don't follow the lead
of the fellow in Anaheim, Cal., who tried to hold up a bank that was no
longer in business and had no money.  On the other hand, you don't want
to be too familiar with the bank.  A California robber ran into his
mother while making his getaway.  She turned him in.

2. Approach the right teller.  Granted, Clark says, this is harder to
plan. One teller in Springfield, Mass., followed the holdup man out of
the bank and down the street until she saw him go into a restaurant. 
She hailed a passing police car, and the police picked him up.  Another
teller was given a holdup note by a robber, and her father, who was
next in line, wrestled the man to the ground and sat on him until
authorities arrived.

3. Don't sign your demand note.  Demand notes have been written on the
back of a subpoena issued in the name of a bank robber in Pittsburgh,
on an envelope bearing the name and address of another in Detroit, and
in East Hartford, Conn., on the back of a withdrawal slip giving the
robber's signature and account number.

4. Beware of dangerous vegetables.  A man in White Plains, N.Y., tried
to hold up a bank with a zucchini.  The police captured him at his
house, where he showed them his "weapon."

5. Avoid being fussy.  A robber in Panorama City, Cal., gave a teller a
note saying, "I have a gun.  Give me all your twenties in this
envelope." The teller said, "All I've got is two twenties."  The robber
took them and left.

6. Don't advertise.  A holdup man thought that if he smeared mercury
ointment on his face, it would make him invisible to the cameras.
Actually, it accentuated his features, giving authorities a much
clearer picture.  Bank robbers in Minnesota and California tried to
create a diversion by throwing stolen money out of the windows of their
cars. They succeeded only in drawing attention to themselves.

7. Take right turns only.  Avoid the sad fate of the thieves in Florida
who took a wrong turn and ended up on the Homestead Air Force Base. 
They drove up to a military police guardhouse and, thinking it was a
tollbooth, offered the security men money.

8. Provide your own transportation.  It is not clever to borrow the
teller's car, which she carefully described to police.  This resulted
in the most quickly solved bank robbery in the history of Pittsfield,
Mass.

9. Don't be too sensitive.  In these days of exploding dye packs,
stuffing the cash into your pants can lead to embarrassing stains,
Clark points out,not to mention severe burns in sensitive places--as
bandits in San Diego and Boston painfully discovered.

10. Consider another line of work.  One nervous Newport, R.I., robber,
while trying to stuff his ill-gotten gains into his shirt pocket, shot
himself in the head and died instantly.  Then there was the case of the
hopeful criminal in Swansea, Mass., who, when the teller told him she
had no money, fainted. He was still unconscious when the police
arrived.

  In view of such ineptitude, it is not surprising that in 1978 and
1979,for example, federal and state officers made arrests in 69 percent
of the bank holdups reported.