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Loot taken from German bank in elaborate vault heist could exceed US$117 million

Hundreds of safe deposit box holders report losses from last month’s heist far exceeding insurance limits

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A giant hole in a wall of the vault of a Sparkasse bank branch after thieves broke in. Photo: Police Gelsenkirchen via EPA
dpa

The loot from the spectacular break-in at a German bank may have exceeded €100 million (US$117.24 million), security sources said on Sunday, as new questions were raised over the origin of some of the money stored inside.

The sources said that individual customers reported that they each had more than €500,000 in their safe deposit boxes at the Sparkasse branch in the western city of Gelsenkirchen, confirming earlier reports by the German mass-circulation daily Bild.

Bild reported that the origin of the money seems suspicious to the investigators, perhaps some of it illegally gained or funds from criminal gangs. Officially, those affected often referred to it as “wedding money”, dpa was told.

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The cash, gold and jewellery was initially roughly estimated to be equal to the amount it was insured for, around €30 million. Later, a police spokesman said: “We are assuming a mid-double-digit million amount”, but added that the total damage could not yet be reliably quantified.

The bank branch that was looted. Photo: Reuters
The bank branch that was looted. Photo: Reuters

The bank would remain closed for several more days as repair work continues. It said additional time was needed to complete repairs after perpetrators drilled a large hole into the vault and looted safe deposit boxes a week ago. Customers would be informed once the branch reopens.

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Specialists have since sealed the hole, it added.

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