STOCKHOLM, Sweden, Sept. 23, 2009

Swedish Thieves Use Chopper in Heist

Robbed Cash Depot by Jumping onto Roof from Helicopter, Hoisting up Bags of Money

  • A police Swat team enters the security firm G4S's cash depot building in Vastberga, Sweden, Wednesday Sept. 23, 2009, after robbers used a helicopter to land on the roof of the building in a robbery attempt. Police have found a helicopter abandoned in northern Stockholm.

    A police Swat team enters the security firm G4S's cash depot building in Vastberga, Sweden, Wednesday Sept. 23, 2009, after robbers used a helicopter to land on the roof of the building in a robbery attempt. Police have found a helicopter abandoned in northern Stockholm.  (AP Photo / Pontus Lundahl, SCANPIX)

(AP)  Robbers used a helicopter Wednesday in a spectacular raid of a cash depot in Stockholm, breaking into the building through the roof and flying off with bags of cash, police and witnesses said.

The pre-dawn heist stunned police in the Swedish capital, who were unable to deploy their own helicopters to the scene because of suspected explosives placed at their hangar.

Shortly after 11 p.m. EDT Tuesday the robbers jumped onto the roof of the cash depot belonging to security firm G4S and smashed a window to enter the building, police spokeswoman Ulrika Lonngren told broadcaster SVT. There were staff inside the building, but no one was injured.

Witnesses reported hearing loud bangs during the heist, but it wasn't immediately clear whether any explosives had been used.

Police were not sure if the thieves managed to steal any money, "but we have reports that witnesses saw them loading objects into the helicopter," police spokeswoman Towe Hagg told The Associated Press.

Witness Bjorn Lockstrom told broadcaster TV4 he saw a gray helicopter hovering above the building for about 15 minutes. "Two men hoisted themselves down," he said. "I saw when they hoisted up money, too."

Police later found an abandoned helicopter near a lake north of Stockholm. Hagg said the chopper was reported stolen and was believed to be the one used by the robbers.

Sweden has seen a series of spectacular robberies in recent years. Last year a group of men broke into a mail processing center in Goteborg, paralyzing large parts of Sweden's second-largest city after spreading out spikes, burning out cars in several different areas and leaving suspected explosive devices in the center.

In 2006, Goteborg's international airport was partially closed after a group of masked men crashed through a gate and held up luggage handlers as they were unloading crates of foreign currency worth 7.8 million kronor ($1.1 million) from a passenger aircraft.

Four years earlier, robbers pulled off a similar heist at Stockholm's Arlanda Airport, when staff were loading foreign currency worth 43 million kronor onto an aircraft.

© MMIX, The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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by inketolstoy September 23, 2009 10:05 AM EDT
"Police were not sure if the thieves managed to steal any money, "but we have reports that witnesses saw them loading objects into the helicopter,"

Yeah, maybe they were just loading office furniture. After this statement, I'm not sure I'd have a lot of confidence in my police force if I lived in Sweden. But I have to say, criminals in Europe seem a lot smarter than those in the US.
Reply to this comment
by incog-nito September 23, 2009 11:15 AM EDT
You said it. In the US criminals would kill people for $50 from the cash register.
by ToolMangler1 September 23, 2009 2:40 PM EDT
Just wait til they start coming here.
wait!! they are here. At least the Mafia arm is).
LOL, How about that! If those crooks want to stay in business, they will have to defeat Islamic and Mexican terrorists first. WOW!!!
Talk about 'Irony'!!!!!!!
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