WILSON, N.C. — Details emerging from the theft of nearly $5 million in
gold bars on an interstate highway indicate the heist was carefully
planned and raise questions about who was involved other than the three
armed robbers.
The robbers pulled up almost immediately after the drivers
made an unscheduled stop on a dark stretch of highway in North Carolina,
according to a warrant. When the crew got out of the truck, they left
their firearms behind in violation of their employer’s security rules,
the sheriff said. And while the workers told authorities they had to
pull over because strong gasoline fumes were making at least one of them
sick, a mechanic found no problems with the truck.
The circumstances led one detective to write that the heist
on Sunday “could be an inside job,” though the sheriff declined to
commit to that theory during a news conference Wednesday. One thing was
clear, though: The heist was targeted and planned, down to the orange
traffic cones the robbers put out while they unloaded 275 pounds of gold
worth $4.8 million.
Asked to put the case into context, Wilson County Sheriff
Calvin Woodard, who’s a native of the area, remarked: “It’s different.”
“We want to make sure that all the citizens, as well as
those who live outside the county, feel safe when they travel that
stretch of highway.”
On Wednesday, authorities released search warrants for the
truck and the drivers’ cellphones filed the day after the heist in which
detectives wrote of their suspicions.
“The fact that the truck was robbed immediately upon pulling
over at an unannounced stop is suspicious in and of itself,” the
warrants state, adding that the truck had no external markings betraying
the cargo. The warrant said the suspects tried to steal the truck but
could not get it started, indicating they did not know how to operate a
commercial truck.
Woodard said the guards were still considered victims, not suspects, but that all possibilities were being investigated.
Asked to elaborate on the suspicions mentioned in the
warrants, the sheriff said they were written in a hurry before the
victims, who spoke little English, could be thoroughly interviewed in
Spanish.
The strange scene unfolded around dusk Sunday in a rural area about 50 miles east of Raleigh.
Earlier in the day, the guards had stopped for gas in
Dillon, South Carolina, near the North Carolina line. As they kept
driving, one of them started to feel sick and said he smelled gas,
Woodard said. A warrant says they pulled over so the man could vomit.
As soon as the guards stopped on the shoulder, three robbers
drove up in a cargo van and confronted them at gunpoint, yelling
“Policia!” and ordering the crew to lie on the ground.
The guards got out of the tractor-trailer without their
guns, according to the sheriff, who said it was a company security
violation to leave the truck without their weapons.
The robbers tied their hands behind their backs and marched
them into nearby woods, authorities said. Woodard said the robbers cut a
padlock, but there were no other security measures to stop them.
He said that after deputies arrived, a mechanic found no problems with the truck.
The heist happened hours after the truck left Miami for a town south of Boston.
Neither guard was injured, according to their employer,
Miami-based Transvalue Inc., which specializes in transporting cash,
precious metals, gems and jewelry. A Transvalue spokeswoman said she
would seek comment from company’s executives about the details in the
warrants.
The company has offered a $50,000 reward for information
leading to an arrest. The company says its shipments are insured for up
to $100 million.
One warrant says the owner of the cargo was Republic Metals
Corp. of Opa-locka, Florida. An attorney for the company did not return a
telephone call seeking comment late Wednesday.
After the thieves escaped with the gold, the guards were
left stranded along Interstate 95 until they drew the attention of
startled motorists. Several called 911 to report seeing uniformed men
running into the highway with their hands bound, motioning for help.
“They’ve got their hands zip-tied behind their backs, and
they’re out in the road to try to flag people down to call the police,”
one caller said.
No comments:
Post a Comment