Marius Becker

In a scene reminiscent from a Hollywood action movie, a Los Angeles manager was forced to rob her own bank when masked criminals strapped a bomb to her body and ordered her to remove funds from the safe.

Police in LA are reportedly still are hunting for two robbers following the incident at a Bank of America branch yesterday.


The woman, who has not been identified, was kidnapped in a park and held overnight. She had been told she was wearing a bomb and ordered to enter the bank, show it to her colleagues and empty the safe as instructed.

The money was then thrown to the robbers who escaped in a car.

A remote controlled robot was used to remove and make safe the device, which investigators said was not explosive.


Dirty work
Crime where innocent individuals are stalked, kidnapped and ordered to carry out illegal activity under threat is known as tiger kidnapping or tiger robbery. Criminals use bullying and scare tactics to threaten someone else to carry out their dirty work for them.

It involves two crimes – abduction of a person or item someone highly values, followed by forcing the victim to carry out a crime under threat.

The practice is thought to have originated as a spin on a tactic used by the Irish Republican Army, which kidnapped people in order to force them into placing car bombs. It has become increasingly common in Ireland, with a particularly high profile incident in 2009.

Bank of Ireland robbery
The Bank of Ireland robbery in 2009 was the largest in the Republic of Ireland's history. Criminals forced a 24-year-old junior bank employee to remove €7.6 million ($9 million) from a branch of the bank in Dublin while his girlfriend and two family members were held hostage.

The bank employee was given a mobile phone and ordered to collect bank notes from the branch. The gangsters gave him a photograph of the rest of the family at gunpoint to convince his colleagues that their lives were under threat. He carried out the robbery before travelling to a railway station, where he surrendered the cash and his sports car to a waiting gang member.

The young man immediately reported the incident at a garda station and the other family members managed to free themselves. Two days later garda recovered €1.8 million of the stolen cash was recovered and arrested seven people. An unidentified bank employee was also arrested a year later based on suspicion that the robbery had been an inside job.



More stories