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Three men admit carrying out Glasgow Argyll Arcade raid | Three men admit carrying out Glasgow Argyll Arcade raid |
(about 3 hours later) | |
Three men have admitted carrying out a £230,000 daylight jewellery raid at the Argyll Arcade in Glasgow last year. | |
Jason Yendall, 29, Aaron Brannan, 24, and Jason Britton, 23, stole 21 high-value watches from Rox in front of stunned shoppers on 24 September 2014. | |
They were caught after two friends - Alistair Oliver, 30, and Gordon McLay, 32, - were seen wearing stolen watches. | They were caught after two friends - Alistair Oliver, 30, and Gordon McLay, 32, - were seen wearing stolen watches. |
All five also admitted being involved in a £20,000 bank robbery in Edinburgh. They will be sentenced next month. | All five also admitted being involved in a £20,000 bank robbery in Edinburgh. They will be sentenced next month. |
The High Court in Glasgow heard Yendall, Brannan and Britton were all friends from Manchester while Oliver and McLay knew each other from living in Wallyford, East Lothian. | |
In the run-up to both robberies, vehicles and registration plates had been stolen in Scotland and England. | |
On 23 September - the day before the Argyll Arcade raid - Yendall, Brannan and Britton carried out a "dry run" of the route to and from the scene. | |
The next morning, the trio along with two unknown associates travelled from Edinburgh and targeted the arcade, which houses more than 30 jewellers and diamond merchants. | |
Sledgehammer and axe | |
Prosecutor Sheena Fraser told the court: "Four of the men got out of the car - two carrying baseball bats, one a sledgehammer and one an axe. | |
"One of them was also carrying a holdall. The driver remained within the car. | |
"The Crown cannot say which of the men was the driver and which four attended at the arcade." | |
The armed robbers - also wearing balaclavas and gloves - sprinted down Buchanan Street into the busy mall at about 13:00. | |
They immediately targeted Rox jewellery store which had expensive Hublot watches as well as Bell and Ross time-pieces. | |
As some of the gang took turns to keep a look-out, others raced inside and smashed a window display. | |
Terrified staff and customers looked on as 21 high-end watches were snatched and tossed into bags. | |
'Fear and panic' | |
Ms Fraser said: "While this was happening, members of the group in the arcade were shouting and banging on other shop windows. | |
"This generated a great deal of fear and panic as it was busy with public and staff from other shops." | |
The court heard how one worker activated a device that saw smoke fill the arcade in a bid to "disorientate" the raiders. | |
Some shoppers captured the incident on their mobile phones. | |
Just under four minutes after arriving, the gang fled with the stolen watches, shouting threats as they left. | |
They jumped into a getaway vehicle before eventually heading on the M8 towards Edinburgh. | |
Oliver and McLay were later seen in a bookmakers in Wallyford, each wearing £2,750 watches taken from the Argyll Arcade. | |
Ms Fraser added: "They had been given them (by Yendall, Brannan and Britton) after they returned to Edinburgh. | |
"They have not been recovered and were sold on by Oliver and McLay." | |
In the days after the raid, Yendall made a number of internet searches looking for second-hand watch websites. | |
Copycat robbery | |
The court a total of 19 Hublot watches and two from Bell and Ross were taken. | |
These ranged in value from £2,750 to £23,000 each. The total haul stolen was £229,601, which has never been recovered. | |
The Argyll Arcade was also left with a £20,000 repair bill. | |
The court was told that Yendall was back in Scotland just over a week later with Brannan and Britton to carry out a copycat robbery at a bank in Edinburgh. | |
Police meantime had been keeping an eye on Oliver. He had been seen buying four balaclavas and an axe at a B&Q store in Edinburgh. | |
Oliver then arranged for Yendall, Brannan and Britton to stay a friend's flat - close to the bank in the capital's Tollcross area, that was being targeted. | |
On 2 October - the day of the robbery - the gang got into a van used in the watch raid. | |
Yendall, Brannan and Britton - all masked and carrying weapons - then held up the bank after two of them jumped the counter. | |
They eventually fled with £19,675 warning staff not to call police. | |
After initially escaping in a van, they then jumped into a waiting Ford car which Oliver and McLay were in. | |
But, the vehicle was stopped by watching police. Cash and two axes were found in the back of the car. | |
Oliver, Britton and Brannan also all had money on them - including £400 in one of their socks. | |
'Clearly identifiable' | |
The gang made no comment, but McLay claimed he and Oliver had been eating in the car when three mystery men jumped in the vehicle and demanded they drive. | |
Brannan's mobile was later checked as police probed the gang's link to the Argyll Arcade theft. | |
On the phone was a snap of Britton wearing one of the watches. | |
Advocate depute Ms Fraser said: "In two of the photographs, a mirror is caught in the background and a man wearing a watch is caught in the mirror. | |
"He is clearly identifiable as Britton. This watch was one valued at £16,000." | |
The court heard that all of the gang already had a criminal past. | |
Yendall was on early release from a five-year jail term in 2012 for another robbery. | |
Judge Lord Turnbull deferred sentencing on all five men until next month for reports. |
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