Virginiatown bank robbery
The Virginiatown Bank Robbery was a 1972 robbery of the Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce in Virginiatown, Ontario, Canada. RobberyAt 9:30am,[1] on Thursday[2] December 21, 1972, two[3] French-speaking[1] armed robbers charged into the Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce in Virginiatown and demanded to be provided with the bank's cash.[4] One staff member was on the phone at the moment the robbers entered, and relayed the situation to the telephone operator who summoned the police.[1] The robbers were armed with a pistol and a machine gun.[2] The robbery was timed to coincide with the bank holding the money for that Friday's Kerr-Addison Mine salary payments.[4] Staff provided the robbers with approximately $60,000 in cash.[1] Neighbouring gas station owner Dave Mann observed the armed men entering the bank and discharged his .303 calibre rifle towards the bank.[4] Mann's shot scared off the getaway driver, leaving the robbers stranded inside.[4] Police arrived on the scene, but were overpowered by the robbers, who stole their vehicle[1] and used it to abduct branch manager Robert (Bob) Emmell.[3][4] 2015 local reporting indicates that staff member Helen Gibson was also held hostage.[5] Leaving in the police vehicle, the robbers drove towards Quebec, dropping Emmell near the Mount Cheminis,[4] while changing vehicles and shooting the tires of the abandoned police car.[1] Nobody was injured during the events.[6] Later the same morning,[6] Sûreté du Québec arrested and charged a 25-year-old man from Arntfield before releasing him on a $500 bail.[7] As of 2008, nobody had been found guilty of the crime.[4]
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