Sardinian gang steals €4m in Fast and Furious-style heist

Pension money was being transported to post offices when the heist took place
The gang used a bin lorry to block the motorway and opened the van safes using angle grinders - Unionesarda

A gang of criminals armed with Kalashnikovs stole four million euros (£3.4m) of pension funds from a convoy of armoured security vans on the island of Sardinia.

‌Dressed in military fatigues, the criminals forced the vehicles to a halt after using a stolen bin lorry to block a highway near the town of Sassari on Wednesday morning.

‌They then opened fire on the convoy, hitting one of the security guards in the leg amid a hail of bullets before prizing the van’s safes open with angle grinders and making off with the money.

The money was being transported to post offices when the heist took place at about 8am local time.

The gang’s tactics were likened to those previously employed by a criminal network from Italy’s southern town of Cerignola, which has committed a string of high-profile robberies in recent decades.

Gang used a bin lorry to block the motorway and opened the van safes using angle grinders
Pension money was being transported to post offices when the heist took place - Unionesarda

Reports of the gang’s methodical planning, which allegedly saw it scout targets for months, and its use of high-powered getaway cars, drew comparisons to plots in the Fast & Furious film series.

Police launched a manhunt across the island for the perpetrators of Wednesday’s robbery, and later found a bag stuffed with explosives dumped on the side of the road. Two getaway cars were also discovered abandoned in the Sardinian countryside.

Witnesses to the robbery described the gang as highly organised.

‌“They didn’t speak to each other. They understood each other and were perfectly organised,” one motorist told the island’s La Nuova Sardegna newspaper.

Highway robberies are increasingly common in Sardinia, with more than a dozen such heists carried out over the past decade.

One security guard was hit in the leg when the gang fired a hail of bullets at the convoy
One security guard was hit in the leg when the gang fired a hail of bullets at the convoy - Unionesard

Lorenzo Tramaglino, the head of a confederation representing private security guards, said their work had become increasingly dangerous.

Italy’s 60,000 security guards were not sufficiently protected or paid for the risk they are exposed to, he said.

‌“It’s a slaughter out there. The assault methods are becoming more military and more dangerous. Tragedies will happen not just to security guards but people in the immediate vicinity,” he said.

Vans of the kind raided on Wednesday frequently carried up to six million euros and had no police escort, Mr Tramaglino added.

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