In 1977, during the Easter weekend, the Standard Bank in Krugersdorp was robbed in one of the most daring robberies in the history of South Africa. More than R400 000 was taken (that’s probably worth more than R10 million in today’s money).
The robbers hired a shop and had to, among other things, give the municipality details about their business. They used a false name – Mr Nightingale, and an address in a Johannesburg suburb.
The inside of the shop’s windows were pasted over with newspaper so that nobody could see what was going on inside. During the day, the robbers dug a tunnel to the bank, placing the soil in bags that were then removed from the premises.
What counted in their favour was that the ground was relatively soft and there were no underground cables or pipes on the route. They even installed wooden props in the tunnel, leading people to believe they had mining experience.
They did their homework very well – they knew compressors were being used nearby, enabling them to mask any sounds they would make during the excavation – in fact, the bank turned off its trembler alarms for that very reason.
The robbers tunnelled for three months, digging 21 metres under four adjacent shops until they struck the bank’s vault, without anyone knowing about it.
The correspondence from the municipality that was sent to the fictitious Mr Nightingale was never returned, although the owner of the property in the Joburg suburb had every intention of doing so, but promptly placed it in a jacket pocket and forgot about it. By the time he remembered it, it was already too late.
During the Easter weekend, the robbers broke through, took what they wanted and disappeared. No arrests have been made to this day.
Strangely enough, the Standard Bank was also the first bank to be held up in the newly declared town of Krugersdorp, but that robber was not so lucky and was arrested shortly thereafter.
Courtesy of KRUGERSDORP NEWS
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