Avago
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With the amount of time I spend in banks it was only a matter of time before I was in one when it was held up...
I was depositing my coin into the counter in the lobby when a dude walks in the door, looks over my shoulder and says "Looks like someone's gonna have a big payday today!"
I hear something to that effect from other customers pretty frequently as people don't understand I search/deposit thousands of dollars in coin weekly and this is super normal for me. I gave him a side glance and a quick, "yep!", and didn't think much more about it.
He lurked around the lobby for a minute or two before helping himself to a coffee and heading back out the door.
Once the machine filled up, the teller manager came over to change the bags and in walks this same guy again. I thought there was something just "iffy" about the guy and just sort of ignored him while I watched the teller pull off the bags.
A minute or so later, out of the corner of my eye someone rushes behind us out the front door carrying a small red bag. Hmm, weird. And then a teller hustles over to the teller manager and me and says "I just got robbed!"
Whelp, that was about it. They locked down the bank with the few customers who were already in it and dialed up the police who responded in a few minutes. Evidently the guy showed the teller a note saying he had a gun and she passed over what little cash she had in her drawer, something like $45 bucks. What a haul!
I had to provide a witness statement to the detective and unfortunately they've yet to find the guy. Luckily for everyone involved it was non-violent and no one was hurt.
The local news ran the security footage that evening - it looks like they're still protecting our money with cameras from the 70's... black & white, and grainy, that captures just a couple frames a second. You can get cheapo cameras from this century online for a hundred bucks, but I don't run a bank so I guess that's not up to me.
Also it didn't appear that they had a silent alarm or automatically locking doors. They physically had to call the police once the guy left and lock all of the doors manually by key.
They recently installed cash dispensers for the tellers that are always locked up and they don't have access to which is why she had so little in her drawer. Kudos to the bank on that one I guess, though I'm sure any losses would be an insurance write-off anyway.
Be careful out there everyone and be aware of your surroundings. Things can go from routine to crisis in a heartbeat!
I was depositing my coin into the counter in the lobby when a dude walks in the door, looks over my shoulder and says "Looks like someone's gonna have a big payday today!"
I hear something to that effect from other customers pretty frequently as people don't understand I search/deposit thousands of dollars in coin weekly and this is super normal for me. I gave him a side glance and a quick, "yep!", and didn't think much more about it.
He lurked around the lobby for a minute or two before helping himself to a coffee and heading back out the door.
Once the machine filled up, the teller manager came over to change the bags and in walks this same guy again. I thought there was something just "iffy" about the guy and just sort of ignored him while I watched the teller pull off the bags.
A minute or so later, out of the corner of my eye someone rushes behind us out the front door carrying a small red bag. Hmm, weird. And then a teller hustles over to the teller manager and me and says "I just got robbed!"
Whelp, that was about it. They locked down the bank with the few customers who were already in it and dialed up the police who responded in a few minutes. Evidently the guy showed the teller a note saying he had a gun and she passed over what little cash she had in her drawer, something like $45 bucks. What a haul!
I had to provide a witness statement to the detective and unfortunately they've yet to find the guy. Luckily for everyone involved it was non-violent and no one was hurt.
The local news ran the security footage that evening - it looks like they're still protecting our money with cameras from the 70's... black & white, and grainy, that captures just a couple frames a second. You can get cheapo cameras from this century online for a hundred bucks, but I don't run a bank so I guess that's not up to me.
Also it didn't appear that they had a silent alarm or automatically locking doors. They physically had to call the police once the guy left and lock all of the doors manually by key.
They recently installed cash dispensers for the tellers that are always locked up and they don't have access to which is why she had so little in her drawer. Kudos to the bank on that one I guess, though I'm sure any losses would be an insurance write-off anyway.
Be careful out there everyone and be aware of your surroundings. Things can go from routine to crisis in a heartbeat!
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