Hostages in German bank branch released but suspect at large
Special forces freed two hostages unharmed as police said at least one suspect remained at large after the bank robbery.
- On Friday, a hostage situation at a savings bank in Sinzig, Germany, ended after special forces searched the building and freed two hostages unharmed from a vault room.
- The incident began early Friday when suspects intercepted a cash transport driver outside the bank branch, forcing him inside where authorities initially believed multiple perpetrators held several hostages.
- Police launched extensive operations, cordoning off a 300-metre radius around the town centre while assuring residents there was no danger to the public outside the secured zone.
- Both hostages were released without injury and are being questioned by investigators, though at least one suspect remains at large following the perpetrators' escape.
- The standoff mirrors recent large-scale German bank heists, including a Gelsenkirchen vault theft where thieves stole up to €90m, suggesting security protocols may face heightened review.
133 Articles
133 Articles
The city of Sinzig in Rhineland-Palatinate held a large-scale operation for hours. The police initially assumed a hostage-taking in a bank. Currently, the search for the perpetrators is under way.
It is still unclear: Was it a bank robbery or a hostage taking? But the events shocked the residents in Sinzig. FOCUS online could talk to eyewitnesses.
The German village of Sinzig was rocked on Friday by an alleged hostage situation at a bank. A man carrying out a white robbery stormed the bank, locked two employees inside, and presumably made off with a suitcase of money. The police have since launched a manhunt for the perpetrator. This is what we already know.
The man took the container that the driver of the cash-in-transit truck was bringing to the bank.
For hours a police operation kept Sinzig in breath. Of the perpetrators: no trace. Now more details about the incident become known.
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