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Thieves Use Vacuum To Siphon Cash From Safes

Tootech writes "A gang of thieves armed with a powerful vacuum cleaner that sucks cash from supermarket safes has struck for the fifteenth time in France. The burglars broke into their latest store near Paris and drilled a hole in the pneumatic tube that siphons money from the checkout to the strong-room. They then sucked rolls of cash totaling £60,000 from the safe without even having to break its lock. Police said the gang — dubbed the Vacuum Burglars — always raid Monoprix supermarkets and have hit 15 of the stores branches around Paris in the past four years. A spokesman added: 'They spotted a weakness in the company's security system and have been exploiting it ever since.'"

9 of 173 comments (clear)

  1. Duckburg by Sonny+Yatsen · · Score: 5, Funny

    Did anyone else picture the Beagle Boys doing this when you read the article?

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  2. Wow. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    That sucks.

  3. Re:You can make this stuff up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    That's it. We should ban vacuums.

  4. HADOPI by srussia · · Score: 4, Insightful

    That's 15 times already that they've connected to the intertubes to illegally download stuff. HADOPI should have sent out 5 cut-off orders already. Oh wait, they are actually stealing real stuff? Carry on then.

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  5. Re:beautifully done :) by TheLink · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Perhaps it isn't hurting the supermarket enough.

    The thieves have taken 4 years to suck up 500000 euros. That's 125000 per year.

    Monoprix have more than 300 stores. If it costs more than 500 euros per store per year to install, maintain and support the extra security measures, it'll cost them more than the thieves are taking.

    Monoprix might just be hoping that the police would eventually catch the thieves, and nobody else will copy them.

    Will be a different thing if they shot or hurt people (since customers might stop going to their stores).

    Lastly if the team has 3 members, assuming equal shares, each is only getting an average of about 40K per year. Not peanuts but definitely not a good way to get rich :).

    In contrast, those infamous investment bankers and friends have certainly taken more than 40k/year each...

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  6. Re:You can make this stuff up. by cmiller173 · · Score: 4, Funny

    Wouldn't a government required registration of vacuums be sufficient?

  7. This isn't new by Nuskrad · · Score: 4, Informative

    Thieves have attempted this approach for as long as this type of cash delivery system has existed, and consequently there are numerous security measures to prevent it. The ceiling space that contains the tubes is usually protected by motion sensors, the cash delivery system usually has some form of intrusion countermeasure that would detect a change in pressure, and the most simple method is a timer system that detects whether the money is received in the strong room N seconds after it's sent by the cashier, triggering an alarm if not.

    It seems that for whatever reason this chain of stores hadn't implemented the basic security measures, or they were ineffective, probably due to human error (i.e. forgetting to set the alarm in the roofspace).

  8. Re:You can make this stuff up. by Abstrackt · · Score: 4, Funny

    That's it. We should ban vacuums.

    That idea sucks.

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  9. Re:beautifully done :) by RabidMonkey · · Score: 4, Informative

    I have worked for a large retail chain, and I can whole-heartedly confirm this logic. They have a chain of over 1000 stores, and some of the costing that was done blew your mind.

    Want to put a lock on the IT cabinet in each store? $100 per cabinet (buy the lock, pay the service guy to go in, train the store people to use the key/make duplicates). *1000 stores, and you're suddenly looking at a non-trivial amount of money for something that should be a simple, no brainer.

    We saw similar things when we wanted to put a shelf in each cabinet to help organize the various little device that went in the cabinet. $200 per store ... forget it. Print labels to put on each piece of equipment to help the store identify it? $50 per store. Forget it.

    It was a good experience ... we learned how to think in massive scale for every project, every little idea we had, but we also found it incredibly stifling. And thats why I *used* to work there.

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