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Hatton Garden heist: CCTV footage shows thieves escaping with jewels 'in wheelie bins' Hatton Garden heist: Former Met chief calls police 'utterly incompetent' as CCTV emerges
(about 5 hours later)
CCTV footage of the gang of jewellery thieves who stole gems worth millions from London vaults has emerged, showing them entering the building disguised as builders. The former head of Scotland Yard’s elite robbery unit has labelled the police’s handling of the Hatton Garden jewellery heist “utterly incompetent”.
At least six men were caught on camera arriving on Thursday at around 9.30pm, after staff left Hatton Garden Safe Deposit Ltd for the bank holiday, and leaving on Easter Sunday with wheelie bins full of jewels. John O'Connor, former commander of the Flying Squad, said he was shocked at claims the Daily Mirror had obtained CCTV footage of suspects at Hatton Garden Safe Deposit Ltd before investigators.
Some were wearing high visibility jackets with the word “gas” on the back and hard hats hiding their faces, while others were dressed in blue overalls, caps, dust masks and gloves, footage obtained by the Daily Mirror shows. “I've never heard anything like this,” he told BBC Radio 4's Today programme.
Carrying tool boxes, bags, steel supports, wheelie bins and equipment, CCTV from a doorway shows them disappear underground for more than 10 hours. A police forensics officer entering the Hatton Garden Safe Deposit company in London “I’m not blaming the Mirror at all but I am pointing some quite accusing fingers at the police for not finding it themselves.” A police forensics officer entering the Hatton Garden Safe Deposit company in London
In that period, they are believed to have jammed the lift and climbed down the shaft to access the basement. A spokesperson for the Metropolitan Police subsequently said investigators were "already aware" of the CCTV footage and its contents before it was published by the Mirror.
The video, released today, showed the gang of thieves getting away with gems worth millions from vaults beneath London’s famous jewellery quarter after a sophisticated three-night operation.
At least six men were caught on camera arriving on Thursday at around 9.30pm, after staff left for the bank holiday, and leaving on Easter Sunday with wheelie bins full of jewels.
Scotland Yard was already under fire for admitting it did not respond to an automatic call when an intruder alarm went off at Hatton Garden Safety Deposit Ltd in the early hours of Good Friday. Jewels on display at the Hatton Garden Safe Deposit
The Metropolitan Police’s Central Communications Command received the alert at 20 minutes after midnight from the Southern Monitoring Alarm Company, while the thieves were carrying out their daring heist.
“The call was recorded and transferred to the police's CAD (computer aided dispatch) system,” a spokesperson said.
“A grade was applied to the call that meant that no police response was deemed to be required.”
The Met has started an internal investigation into why the alert was ignored.
Although the spokesperson claimed it was “too early to say” if the handling of the call had an impact on the burglary, the CCTV suggests that the thieves could have been caught red handed.
Mr O’Connor said automated call handling systems could be problematic.
“They're so rigid in the way that they apply the rules if there have been a couple of false alarms,” he told Radio 4.
“They've got a graded response system and this was graded very lowly - how can you possibly to that?
“A passover on a fortified building containing a vault with safe deposit boxes and you don’t respond to it – I can’t believe they could be so utterly incompetent.” The Metropolitan Police has come under fire for failing to respond to an automated call as the burglars were inside
Some of the burglars seen in the CCTV footage were wearing high visibility jackets with the word “gas” on the back and hard hats hiding their faces, while others were dressed in blue overalls, caps, dust masks and gloves.
Carrying tool boxes, bags, steel supports, wheelie bins and equipment, the CCTV from a doorway shows them disappear underground for more than 10 hours.
In that period, they are believed to have jammed the lift and climbed down the shaft to access the lift shaft to climb down into the basement.
World exclusive: Watch dramatic moment raiders carry out £60m Hatton Garden heist http://t.co/wEZrrUgamj pic.twitter.com/OFaAo3k4Ao
They made their way to the vault, where they used a heavy duty drill to bore holes into its reinforced, two-metre-thick wall to access 70 safety deposit boxes filled with diamonds and jewels, police said.They made their way to the vault, where they used a heavy duty drill to bore holes into its reinforced, two-metre-thick wall to access 70 safety deposit boxes filled with diamonds and jewels, police said.
Officers who entered the vault on Tuesday described “chaotic scenes” with dust and debris covering floors strewn with discarded safety deposit boxes and numerous power tools, including an angle grinder and crowbars. Jewels on display at the Hatton Garden Safe Deposit Officers who entered the vault on Tuesday described “chaotic scenes” with dust and debris covering floors strewn with discarded safety deposit boxes and numerous power tools, including an angle grinder and crowbars.
The Mirror’s CCTV footage suggests that operation took more than two days, with gang members re-appearing above ground at around 8am on Good Friday carrying tools and again at 10.15pm the next day. The Mirror’s CCTV footage suggests that operation took place over Thursday, Good Friday and Saturday night, with gang members re-appearing above ground at around 8am on Friday carrying tools and again at 10.15pm the next day. Scotland Yard has come under fire for its handling of the Hatton Garden burglary
The burglars finally left early in the morning on Easter Sunday, dragging now heavy wheelie bins and bags believed to be packed with the stolen gems. The thieves left early in the morning on Easter Sunday, dragging now heavy wheelie bins and bags believed to be packed with the stolen gems.
At 6.45am, the last members got into a white van and disappeared.At 6.45am, the last members got into a white van and disappeared.
A source told the Mirror: “This was clearly the work of a professional gang who planned this job down to every last detail. But they may have made a mistake in leaving this footage behind.”A source told the Mirror: “This was clearly the work of a professional gang who planned this job down to every last detail. But they may have made a mistake in leaving this footage behind.”
Scotland Yard initially said officers were first alerted after workers arrived at 8am on Tuesday but yesterday admitted that an intruder alarm set off at Hatton Garden Safety Deposit Ltd sparked an automated call days before.
The Metropolitan Police’s Central Communications Command received the alert at 20 minutes after midnight on Good Friday from the Southern Monitoring Alarm Company, while the thieves were carrying out their daring heist.
“The call stated that a confirmed intruder alarm had been activated at the Hatton Garden Safe Deposit Ltd,” a spokesperson said. The Metropolitan Police has come under fire for failing to respond to an automated call as the burglars were inside
“The call was recorded and transferred to the police's CAD (computer aided dispatch) system.
“A grade was applied to the call that meant that no police response was deemed to be required.”
The Met has started an internal investigation into why the alert was ignored.
Although the spokesperson claimed it was “too early to say” if the handling of the call had an impact on the burglary, the CCTV suggest that the thieves could have been caught red handed.
A security guard had also responded to the alarm on Good Friday but did not search inside “because he doesn't get paid enough”, one client in London's famous jewellery district claimed he was told.