Thieves used the quiet Christmas period to drill their way into the vault of a German retail bank and make off with at least €10 million worth of money and valuables from customers’ deposit boxes, police said.
The perpetrators drilled through a thick concrete wall at a branch of Sparkasse bank in the western city of Gelsenkirchen and then broke into several thousand safe deposit boxes and stole a sum estimated at double-digit millions of euros, the police said in a statement.
Most shops and banks close in Germany over the Christmas period, starting from the evening of December 24th, and police only discovered the hole after a fire alarm went off in the early hours of Monday, December 29th.
Dozens of angry customers gathered in front of the bank on Tuesday loudly chanting “Let us in!”.
“I couldn’t sleep last night. We’re getting no information,” one man told the Welt broadcaster as he waited outside the branch, adding that he had been using the safe for 25 years and that it contained his savings for old age.
Another man said he used his deposit box to store cash and jewellery for his family.
A spokesperson for the Sparkasse bank in Gelsenkirchen did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
An image released by police in Gelsenkirchen shows a hole drilled by thieves into the vault of a German savings bank.
Police said witnesses have reported that they saw several men on Saturday night carrying large bags in the stairwell of an adjacent parking garage.
There were also reports of a black Audi RS 6 leaving the garage early on Monday morning with masked men inside. The vehicle’s licence plate was that of a car stolen in Hanover, more than 200km to the northeast of Gelsenkirchen, police said. – Reuters