London's diamond quarter hit by thieves

  • Breaking
  • 07/04/2015

Thieves have raided some 300 deposit boxes in London's diamond quarter, accessing the vault through a lift shaft and using heavy cutting equipment.

The daring heist apparently took place over the long Easter weekend and police said in a statement that they were only called to the address in Hatton Garden in central London on Tuesday morning (local time).

"It appears that heavy cutting equipment has been used to get into a vault at the address and a number of safety deposit boxes have been broken into," London's Metropolitan Police said.

No estimate was given of how much the thieves have made away with.

They managed to disarm the building's sophisticated alarm system, The Daily Telegraph newspaper reported, while Sky News television said there were around 600 safety deposit boxes in the vault.

The company said on its website that it was founded in 1954 and was one of the first places in Britain to offer safety deposit boxes, which are used by local jewellers and could contain loose gemstones.

The website advertises the vaults as "a secure and cost-effective solution to store and protect important and irreplaceable personal belongings".

Lewis Malka, a diamond jewellery expert who works on Hatton Garden, tweeted that one client's antique bracelet had been stolen in the robbery.

The last major safety deposit raid in London, which occurred in plush Knightsbridge in 1987, is thought to have been one of the largest robberies in history.

The hoard was valued at the time at STG60 million (NZ$120M).

There have been two previous raids in 1975 and 2003 on safety deposit boxes in Hatton Garden, a jewellery hub since the 19th century that also houses the global headquarters of the De Beers diamond company.

AFP

source: newshub archive