Es gibt nun ein Weblog und ein Buch, dass besondere Banknoten versammelt und präsentiert:
Robbing a bank is as simple as putting pen to paper. Here are actual demand notes used in successful and unsuccessful unarmed bank robberies - - accompanied by a photo of each robber and appended with details about the robbery itself.
Note’ robberies are the single most popular method of robbing banks today. Some use a one-line directive. Others are explicit in detail. Some are plain bizarre. Each day there is another.
This book collects Notes from successful and unsuccessful bank robberies - “note jobs” in FBI-parlance. And much like you see here on this blog, provides the vital stats for each attempt.
The contents of these hapless acts fall somewhere between Art and Sociology. Ever since Woody Allen’s ‘Take the Money and Run’ I have been intrigued by the brutal urgency of demand notes and the audacity of those who have created them.
Wichtig ist dem Autor Ken Habarta:
To clarify, 'Bank Notes 365' does not cover armed bank robbery (even if a note was used). It's a whole other class of crime. Although, when a robber puts 'I have a gun' on their demand note they are usually prosecuted as if they had used a gun. It's the 'implied threat' in the note which gets a lot of robbers into more trouble than if they had just put 'robbery' or 'give me the money'.
Hier der Bicycle-Bandit
und wenn Frauen zu sehr rauben:
"** lady bank robbers tend to use bags"
Robbing a bank is as simple as putting pen to paper. Here are actual demand notes used in successful and unsuccessful unarmed bank robberies - - accompanied by a photo of each robber and appended with details about the robbery itself.
Note’ robberies are the single most popular method of robbing banks today. Some use a one-line directive. Others are explicit in detail. Some are plain bizarre. Each day there is another.
This book collects Notes from successful and unsuccessful bank robberies - “note jobs” in FBI-parlance. And much like you see here on this blog, provides the vital stats for each attempt.
The contents of these hapless acts fall somewhere between Art and Sociology. Ever since Woody Allen’s ‘Take the Money and Run’ I have been intrigued by the brutal urgency of demand notes and the audacity of those who have created them.
Wichtig ist dem Autor Ken Habarta:
To clarify, 'Bank Notes 365' does not cover armed bank robbery (even if a note was used). It's a whole other class of crime. Although, when a robber puts 'I have a gun' on their demand note they are usually prosecuted as if they had used a gun. It's the 'implied threat' in the note which gets a lot of robbers into more trouble than if they had just put 'robbery' or 'give me the money'.
Hier der Bicycle-Bandit
und wenn Frauen zu sehr rauben:
"** lady bank robbers tend to use bags"
vabanque - am Dienstag, 24. November 2009, 00:34 - Rubrik: Bankraub-Trends
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