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Dubai Police Foil Dh91.8m Pink Diamond Heist in Just 8 Hours
Dubai Police Foil Dh91.8m Pink Diamond Heist in Just 8 Hours

UAE Moments

timea day ago

  • UAE Moments

Dubai Police Foil Dh91.8m Pink Diamond Heist in Just 8 Hours

According to Dubai Media Office, the operation — codenamed 'Pink Diamond' — exposed a year-long scheme by three Asian suspects, who were arrested within just eight hours of the crime being reported. The stolen gem, a 21-carat Fancy Intense pink diamond with the highest purity, is among the rarest in the world, representing only 0.01% of global diamonds. The stone had recently arrived in Dubai from Europe, sparking the gang's elaborate plot. Authorities revealed the suspects used fake identities, luxury rental cars, and five-star hotel meetings to gain the trader's trust. They even brought along a supposed 'gem expert' to strengthen their disguise. The ruse worked well enough to convince the trader to take the diamond out of secure storage and into a private villa for viewing. But thanks to rapid coordination, Dubai Police intercepted the plan and secured the rare jewel. Watch the full video of the sting below. القيادة العامة لشرطة دبي تحبط جريمة سرقة ماسة وردية نادرة جداً على مستوى العالم، تبلغ قيمتها السوقية 25 مليون دولار أمريكي، حيث تم إلقاء القبض على العصابة المكونة من 3 أشخاص من جنسية آسيوية خلال 8 ساعات. @DubaiPoliceHQ — Dubai Media Office (@DXBMediaOffice) August 18, 2025

How real Oceans 11 gang bagged £100m in world's biggest heist with spy cams & fake vault… but were undone by rooky error
How real Oceans 11 gang bagged £100m in world's biggest heist with spy cams & fake vault… but were undone by rooky error

The Sun

time01-08-2025

  • The Sun

How real Oceans 11 gang bagged £100m in world's biggest heist with spy cams & fake vault… but were undone by rooky error

IT was known as the Belgian 'Fort Knox' and security was second to none - with its seemingly impenetrable vault, state of the art alarms and high spec motion sensors. Yet the World Diamond Center, in Antwerp, was the scene of the biggest and most audacious diamond heist in history, in 2003, which saw thieves getting away with an estimated $100m and left police scratching their heads as to how they managed it. 12 12 In what could have been the script for a Hollywood movie, the investigation eventually led police to Italy and a gang of elite criminals, known as The School of Turin, each specialising in various skills including safe breaking and security cameras. As brilliant as the heist was, involving a camera pen and even a replica vault, the sophisticated gang were finally undone through one schoolboy error - a bag of rubbish containing half eaten cheese and a salami baguette which had been dumped in a forest outside the city. In the Netflix documentary, Stolen: Heist of the Century, one of the jewel thieves explains how it was done and the detectives leading the case tell how they eventually managed to track down their culprits.. On Monday, 17 February, 2003, Agim De Bruycker, then Commander of the police Diamond Squad in Antwerp, was greeted at his office by his colleague, Detective Patrick Peys. 'There has been a burglary,' he said. 'A safe has been broken open.' It was to prove something of an understatement. When they arrived at the Diamond Center, they were greeted by a scene of chaos, with panicking dealers wondering if their diamonds, gold or money was gone. Two floors below, carnage awaited. 'I saw a steel door a foot thick, standing open,' Patrick recalls. 'Inside, the walls were covered with individual lockers. The majority were cracked and opened. I was standing in front of Ali Baba's cave.' The floor was scattered with bank notes and small emeralds that the thieves deemed not worth their time. Nearly all of the 189 safe deposit boxes had been raided. The heist immediately hit the news headlines and the pressure was on the police to find out who had done it. But the mystery was also how had they done it? 'The combination on the safe door was changed weekly and that dial would give you 100million possibilities,' says Patrick. In addition was a clever magnetic alarm system consisting of two metal plates – one attached to the vault door, the other to the door jamb. If someone tried to open the door while the alarm was still activated, it would break the magnetic field and the alarm would set off. The Sun's reporter blags London landmarks Inside the vault was a light detector and a motion and heat detector. The light sensor had been covered with black duct tape and the motion sensor sprayed with hairspray. The 13-storey building had 24 cameras working day in, day out. The footage for each day was stored on a videocassette but the ones for February 15 and 16 – the weekend of the heist – were missing. 'I was thinking this had to be an inside job,' says Agim. 'You had the security, two concierges and the building manager. We started investigating them thoroughly and searched their houses but in the end, we had to clear them all. We had no idea who had committed the crime. Then, suddenly, in the afternoon, I got a telephone call.' Breakthrough 12 12 A shopkeeper had found a bag of rubbish dumped in The Floordambos Woods, 25 miles south of Antwerp, where he liked to go to feed the rabbits and fish. Inside was a lot of torn paper with words like Antwerp and Diamonds. Realising it wasn't the usual type of fly-tipped rubbish he called the police. 'That call changed everything,' says Patrick. 'The bags also contained some very small green emerald stones, banknotes, wrenches and flashlights as well as some left over food – pasta, cheese, a half-eaten salami sandwich, wine. This was strange because I don't think they had a picnic in the vault room. The food was probably from a hideout.' Another critical piece of evidence found in the woods was the casing of the video cassettes kept at the Diamond Center. But the tape had been removed. A search of the highway between Antwerp and Brussels found that the tape had been dumped en-route. Experts from Sony were able to reinstall it into the casing so that it could be watched. It was a big moment that promised to show the thieves at work. 'We had all the investigators together, along with my superiors, for the screening,' recalls Agim. 'The tape is put into the cassette player, the film starts… and it was a porn movie.' I've never been so disappointed in a porn movie as I was then! Patrick Peys 'I've never been so disappointed in a porn movie as I was then!' adds Patrick. The police started piecing together the torn paper found in the rubbish bag. Some of it formed a document, written in Italian, which was a permit to install a security system at an office in the Diamond Center. The document was issued by the Italian diamond company Damoros Preziosi. The company had an office in the building that had been rented for two years but cupboards and desks were empty. 'The building manager didn't know the man who rented that office very well but she could tell us that he was an Italian businessman named Leonardo Notarbartolo. She had no address for him,' says Agim. When police went through CCTV footage in the building, she was eventually able to point him out. Like many other dealers who rented space in the building, he regularly went down to the vault to store his jewels. He never spoke to anyone and never attracted attention. But a check with Italian police found he was a well-known criminal with convictions for burglary and jewellery theft. They believed he was living somewhere in Turin. Paper scraps from the rubbish bag also revealed an envelope with the name Elio D'Onorio with an address close to Rome. He turned out to be an alarm specialist and a known I talian criminal. The rubbish also revealed a receipt from a hardware shop located between Antwerp and Brussels in which various items used in the robbery were used, such as an extendable mop that was found in the vault. The shop owner was able to provide the police with a description of the man who bought them and an identikit picture matched that of D'Onorio. A colleague of Agim and Patrick's showed them a file he had on an attempted burglary that had taken place at the Diamond Center six years earlier by a man pretending to be a diamond dealer who was also from Turin called Ferdinando Finotto. 'The School of Turin' Marci Martino, head of the Flying Squad in Turin, informed the Antwerp detectives about a group specialising in thefts of banks and bank vaults there that journalists have coined, 'The School of Turin.' 'He explained that it was a bunch of people, each specialising in some form of criminal behaviour,' says Patrick. 'So, they picked who they needed according to his or her speciality.' 'It made a lot of sense to us,' says Agim. 'Certainly given the way the thieves had tackled all these security systems.' With three names now in the bag, Agim and Patrick began working out how they thought the operation had been done. But their version and that of Notarbartolo's differ. The Antwerp detectives believe that entrance was gained from the garage that led through a connecting door directly into the building on the ground floor. A modified Allen key, found in the rubbish at Floordambos, opened the door when they tested it. Career criminal 12 12 12 And in an exclusive interview, Leonardo Notarbartolo tells the documentary makers his side of the story. Born in Palermo, he got into crime at the age of six when he stole 5,000 lire from a cowherd. 'In the 80s, I opened my first jewellery shop,' he says. 'I started going back and forth to Antwerp to buy gemstones and got an apartment there and an office and safe deposit box at the Diamond Center.' He admits to being part of the gang who carried out the heist but named a mysterious figure who he claimed was the mastermind of the crime. If I took photos inside the vault, he would give me 100,000 dollars. I said, 'Okay. I'm in' Leonardo Notarbartolo 'I am a participant. The mastermind was someone who went by the name of Alessandro, although that probably wasn't his real name. He took me for coffee one day, saying that he knew who I was and that we had met in Italy, and gave me a pen with a tiny little camera inside and said that if I took photos inside the vault, he would give me 100,000 dollars. I said, 'Okay. I'm in.'' In February 2001, two years before the heist, Notarbartolo entered the vault and took pictures of the safe deposits and the alarms systems. He was then asked to join the gang for a share of the spoils worth at least $15m dollars each. 'I had always wanted to be part of something like this. It was too tempting,' he says. 'Alessandro took me to an industrial area where there are warehouses. We go inside and there are three people there who he introduces me to. There were the four of us main ones - The Monster, The Genius, the Key Master and me. The fifth was My Friend. Agim De Bruycker 'The first guy was a master when it came to locks and alarms. He is 1.93 metres tall, well-built. That's why I call him The Monster. The other, The Genius, was a little man, really intelligent. He was half hacker and half computer geek and an expert in alarms. Then there's the one that seems a bit of a thug. He can open any lock. I called him The Key Master. 'They pull aside some big plastic sheets and I see this place which looks just like the vault. It's exactly the same, with the sensors correctly positioned. 'The gang was coming in and out of the Diamond Center to make copies of keys and to check security systems at least 30 times and never left a trace. 'When The Genius realised there was a light bulb above the vault door, he had a micro camera inserted in it to record images of the combination lock below. In the boiler room were some fire extinguishers and The Genius took one and modified it by cutting the bottom and inserting a receiver inside which transmitted images from the camera to us.' The heist Three days before the heist, Notarbartolo, who had graduated from a spy pen to a video camera inside a small bag, used hairspray to fog up the sensor. 'We didn't enter the way the police think we did. We entered from Pelikaanstraat, where there is a space behind the Diamond Center to park cars. We skirted along the walls of the Diamond Center and went up a stepladder that we took with us, to the first floor. The Genius had bypassed the alarm that was on this balcony. 'On the day of the hit, they wanted me to stay outside to keep a watch for any police. There were the four of us main ones - The Monster, The Genius, the Key Master and me. The fifth was My Friend. He has excellent qualities in our line of work. 12 'Inside the building they deactivated the two side cameras and then checked the images from the micro-camera to see the last combination that was entered that night. The biggest problem was the magnet alarm. But The Genius had already studied it.' This part of the story tallies with that of the police. 'Some work had been done on the magnetic alarm,' Agim confirms. 'The screws had been removed and shortened so that from the outside everything looks fine but on the inside the screws are not attaching to the door anymore. "Instead, double-sided tape was used. On the night of the heist, they pulled the plates away from the vault door together. The magnetic field is still intact, the alarm is still on but they are able to open the vault door.' Each safe deposit box has an individual key and a three-digit dial but this was by-passed by a cleverly manufactured drill that looked a bit like a corkscrew with two metal bars with which the thieves could force each box open. After a few hours inside, the gang made their get-away in the car driven by Notarbartolo, back to his apartment where they celebrated with some food and wine. 12 How the heist was carried out Two years before Notarbartolo posed as a diamond merchant and rented an office in the Diamond Center, as well as a safety deposit box in the vault. He used his position to pay regular visits to the vault, taking pictures of the alarm systems and sensors and memorising the building's layout. Months before A secret camera was placed in the lighbulb above the vault door, to monitor the combinations used on the lock, which were changed every week. A receiver was placed in a fire extinguisher in a nearby boiler room to transmit images from the camera. Notarbartolo claims the gang regularly met at a warehouse where a full size replica vault had been built, to hone their plan. Days before Notarbartolo used hairspray on the thermal-motion sensors to disable them. The screws on the magnetic plates that locked the vault were loosened. Day of the robbery The gang gained access from a space behind the centre, using a stepladder to climb to a balcony on the first floor. Inside, they used a long, two-part, three-dimensional key along with the vault's combination to open the main door. One plate of the magnetic lock was unscrewed to bypass the alarm system when the vault door was opened. A polystyrene shield was used to block the infrared ray of the motion sensor. The ceiling light sensor was covered with duct tape so the gang could turn the lights on inside the vault. A custom-made, hand-cranked drill was used to open 109 of the 189 safe deposit boxes within the vault. The gang then emptied the contents of the boxes into duffel bags and left the building through a street exit. Before leaving, they stole the security footage from the Diamond Center's office. According to Notarbartolo, it was his job to dispose of things snatched that they did not need. But he says that while he was in the shower someone also threw the remains of their meal into the bags without him realising. When he and his friend took them to the wood, they were startled by a noise and instead of burning it, as intended, dumped it there and fled. The following day the gang met up in Brescia, Italy to divvy up the bounty and, such was Notarbartolo's confidence that he was not on the police's radar, he then went back to Antwerp to return the hired car. The cops were startled when the building manager of the Diamond Center rang them to say that Leonardo Notarbartolo was actually standing in the building right now. Our main suspect returned to Antwerp and was standing in the building that he had robbed a week before. It was unbelievable Agim De Bruycker 'Our main suspect returned to Antwerp and was standing in the building that he had robbed a week before. It was unbelievable,' says Agim. The police rushed there and he was arrested. He reluctantly gave them the address of his apartment and when they drove there, three people were coming out – Notarbartolo's wife and two men, one carrying a rolled up carpet on his shoulder. They were stopped and inside the carpet were small green emeralds. A 'pure fantasy' A search of the apartment found a bag with a hole in the side, perfect for concealing a video camera. 'We also found a receipt from a local supermarket in Antwerp with different food items like wine, pasta, cheese and salami of the type found back in Floordambos,' says Agim. 'We matched Mr Notarbartolo's DNA with that found on the half-eaten salami sandwich. 'Based on the telephone records from SIM cards and on the DNA profiles, we were able to identify four people that were 100 per cent involved in this crime – Ferdinando Finotto (The Monster), Elio D'Onorio (The Genius) and a third person, Pietro Tavano (My Friend) - an old friend of Mr Notarbartolo and also a member of The School of Turin. The fourth person was Notarbartolo.' Agim believes much of Notarbartolo's account is pure fantasy. 'Spy pens? Replica vaults? That isn't the story of a crime, it's more like the script of a movie. There was no super criminal lurking in the background. It was just him.' Notarbartolo received a 10-year prison service and served six years, before being released in 2009. His wife was never charged. Three other gang members were jailed for five years. But the true value of the heist is still a mystery. 'No diamonds or money were recovered,' says Agim. 'We came up with the figure of $100m but I'm sure that the amount is much higher than that.' Stolen: Heist of the Century is on Netflix from August 8 12

Shocking moment jewel thief tries to swallow $770,000 worth of Tiffany & Co. diamonds
Shocking moment jewel thief tries to swallow $770,000 worth of Tiffany & Co. diamonds

Daily Mail​

time20-06-2025

  • Daily Mail​

Shocking moment jewel thief tries to swallow $770,000 worth of Tiffany & Co. diamonds

A habitual jewel thief was caught on police body worn camera swallowing $770,000 worth of stolen Tiffany & Co. diamonds to avoid arrest. Jaythan Gilder, 32, was pulled over about 330 miles outside of Orlando, Florida, on February 26 after troopers were warned to 'be on the lookout' following a robbery at Tiffany & Co. earlier in the day. He had allegedly posed as a representative of an NBA player seeking to purchase diamonds. When he was taken to a private room, he snatched two sets of diamond earrings worth $609,500 and $160,000 and fled the store. Extraordinary body camera footage from his arrest was obtained by The Smoking Gun and captured the moment an officer noticed Gilder. The jewel thief was handcuffed and being led to the patrol car, 'was talking with a closed mouth and was moving an object around... using his tongue.' An officer quickly lunged at him while two other cops rushed to help, ordering Gilder to open his mouth and spit out the contents as they held him face down by the throat. 'You're about to get tased,' one trooper told him as he refused to comply. Moments later, a second said: 'He swallowed something.' The officers grabbed Gilder's jaw and throat, fearing he may have swallowed narcotics. He had a white substance on his lips which he later said was a cold sore cream. A search of Gilder's rented car yielded price tags and earring cards for Tiffany & Co. products, leading officers to determine he had swallowed the diamonds. Gilder was arrested and taken to hospital, where he reportedly refused an X-ray. He was scanned at jail and 'foreign objects' were detected inside his body. He reportedly asked: 'Am I going to be charged with what's in my stomach?' Upon return to hospital, Gilder reportedly 'refused to take any laxatives and claimed to be a practicing Muslim who would only eat after sundown and before sunrise due to it being the holiday of Ramadan.' This slowed recovery efforts, but after two weeks in mid-March, the Tiffany & Co. diamonds were reportedly passed naturally. Early on March 10, officers discovered two stones while tracking Gilder's excrement. But it was later determined these 'were not the earrings from Tiffany & Co.' They were of little value, but work was being done to determine where they had come from. Hours later, Gilder passed two of the diamonds allegedly stolen from Tiffany & Co., and two days later on June 12 he passed the final diamond. Back in February 2022, Gilder was arrested for stealing diamonds from a jeweler in Colorado and allegedly swallowed them when he was confronted by police According to the publication, the diamonds underwent rigorous cleaning at Tiffany's Master Jeweler and were returned to the company. It is unclear if they have since been sold. Back in February 2022, Gilder was arrested for stealing diamonds from a jeweler in Colorado and allegedly swallowed them when he was confronted by police. They were never recovered. He remains in custody facing charges of robbery and grand theft. Gilder attempted to be released from custody to attend his mother's funeral in Texas, but bail was denied.

Kris Jenner, 69, channels Coco Chanel in elegant ensemble during Paris visit for Kim Kardashian's jewellery heist trial... following the duo's slew of pointed 'secret meaning' outfits
Kris Jenner, 69, channels Coco Chanel in elegant ensemble during Paris visit for Kim Kardashian's jewellery heist trial... following the duo's slew of pointed 'secret meaning' outfits

Daily Mail​

time15-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Daily Mail​

Kris Jenner, 69, channels Coco Chanel in elegant ensemble during Paris visit for Kim Kardashian's jewellery heist trial... following the duo's slew of pointed 'secret meaning' outfits

Kris Jenner stepped out once again during her Paris visit to support her daughter Kim during the trial for her 2016 diamond heist. The reality matriarch, 69, looked incredible in a boxy Chanel jacket, with the fashion house's CC logo on the buttons, paired with wide-leg black trousers and heels while departing the Ritz Hotel on Thursday afternoon. Far from merely being a journey for justice, in true Jenner-Kardashian style, the mother and daughter have treated their trip to the French capital as a fashion parade. Throughout their stay, dramatic ensembles appear to be steeped in meaning, complete with dripping jewels, masculine suits and recreations. Kim was seen wearing a lavish diamond necklace and earrings as she testified at the trial of the gang accused of robbing her at gunpoint in her Paris hotel room in 2016 - a moment she revealed led her to believe she would be killed. The influencer was joined by mother Kris as she made her way into the courtroom on Tuesday. Kardashian - who was dressed in a black blazer, skirt and sunglasses - waved at onlookers and press before pulling her mother aside for a brief chat. It marks the first time Kim confronted the suspected 'grandpa gang' of Paris robbers who are accused of stealing jewellery worth millions of dollars from her. In the aftermath, Kim was said to have vowed to stop showing off her jewels on social media. For her court appearance, the reality star wore a $3 million necklace by Samer Halimeh New York, crafted in 18K white gold and featuring 80 diamonds, culminating in a 10.13-carat pear-shaped center stone. She added a Sloan Pave diamond ear cuff worth $8,300 and a second Serti Sur Vide Earcuff by Repossi made up of 12 pear shaped diamonds for 4.55 carats. Jeweller Zack Stone noted that Kim was sporting a diamond anklet that had been given to her by daughter North. Stone told MailOnline: 'Kim's anklet looks like it could be the sentimental piece she received from North for Mother's Day, featuring the birthstones of her four children. 'Set with round-cut diamonds, it's delicately accented with a single pearl, a pear-cut garnet, a pear-cut zircon, and an emerald-cut emerald. I'd estimate its value at around $8,000. 'On her right hand, Kim is sporting a massive ring. While the exact cut is hard to confirm, the diamond appears to be at least 20 carats, set in a solitaire design that further emphasises its remarkable size. 'Given these details, it's safe to assume the ring carries a hefty price tag - my estimate would be around $3.5 million.' Inside the courtroom, Kardashian broke down in tears as she shared her fears that she thought she would raped that evening. Search for The Trial: The Kim Kardashian Heist, wherever you get your podcasts now. New episodes will be released every Monday and Thursday. Subscribe to The Crime Desk to listen ad-free.

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