Whitey Ford
06-20-2023, 11:59 PM
Bank robber got $8,000, lost it when someone stole his getaway car: FBI
https://i.ibb.co/34zfQJ9/DINDUmushroom-cloud-icon-nuclear-explosion.png
A Minnesota man traveled to Chicago twice last year to rob banks, but he lost the money when someone stole his car with the cash inside, according to a federal criminal complaint.
Alan Duncan, a convicted murderer, is charged with robbing Selfreliance Federal Credit Union, 2332 West Chicago Avenue, on November 20. Duncan returned to Minnesota after the robbery and is suspected of returning to Chicago ten days later to rob another bank.
But Duncan confided in his brother that he lost the money — and more — when someone stole his car with the cash inside.
Three days before the robbery, Minneapolis police arrested Duncan for fleeing police and a weapons violation, an FBI agent said in the complaint. Duncan was released the next day. And the day after that, the agent alleged, Duncan’s car ran a series of Illinois toll plazas as it headed toward Chicago from Wisconsin.
“Give me all the money or I’ll shoot,” Duncan allegedly told the bank teller, who handed over $6,010.
Investigators tracked the robber’s getaway car, which is registered to Duncan, across Chicago and out of the state as it ran more toll booths on the way to Wisconsin.
But Duncan had a different story a few days later when he called his brother, who was in the Hennepin County jail. The car, Duncan revealed, had been stolen from outside a Minneapolis homeless shelter.
“They taking that b*tch not knowing it was full. When I say full bro’ I’m talking about I had twelve thousand dollars cash … They took that suitcase boy, it f*cked me up,” the FBI agent quoted Duncan as saying in the recorded call. The agent wrote that he believed the money Duncan “lost” came from the bank robberies.
https://cwbchicago.com/2023/06/bank-robbers-car-stolen-with-cash-inside.html#:~:text=to%20support%20CWBChicago-,Bank%20robber%20got%20%248%2C000%2C%20lost%20it%2 0when,stole%20his%20getaway%20car%3A%20FBI&text=CHICAGO%20%E2%80%94%20A%20Minnesota%20man%20t raveled,to%20a%20federal%20criminal%20complaint.
https://i.ibb.co/34zfQJ9/DINDUmushroom-cloud-icon-nuclear-explosion.png
A Minnesota man traveled to Chicago twice last year to rob banks, but he lost the money when someone stole his car with the cash inside, according to a federal criminal complaint.
Alan Duncan, a convicted murderer, is charged with robbing Selfreliance Federal Credit Union, 2332 West Chicago Avenue, on November 20. Duncan returned to Minnesota after the robbery and is suspected of returning to Chicago ten days later to rob another bank.
But Duncan confided in his brother that he lost the money — and more — when someone stole his car with the cash inside.
Three days before the robbery, Minneapolis police arrested Duncan for fleeing police and a weapons violation, an FBI agent said in the complaint. Duncan was released the next day. And the day after that, the agent alleged, Duncan’s car ran a series of Illinois toll plazas as it headed toward Chicago from Wisconsin.
“Give me all the money or I’ll shoot,” Duncan allegedly told the bank teller, who handed over $6,010.
Investigators tracked the robber’s getaway car, which is registered to Duncan, across Chicago and out of the state as it ran more toll booths on the way to Wisconsin.
But Duncan had a different story a few days later when he called his brother, who was in the Hennepin County jail. The car, Duncan revealed, had been stolen from outside a Minneapolis homeless shelter.
“They taking that b*tch not knowing it was full. When I say full bro’ I’m talking about I had twelve thousand dollars cash … They took that suitcase boy, it f*cked me up,” the FBI agent quoted Duncan as saying in the recorded call. The agent wrote that he believed the money Duncan “lost” came from the bank robberies.
https://cwbchicago.com/2023/06/bank-robbers-car-stolen-with-cash-inside.html#:~:text=to%20support%20CWBChicago-,Bank%20robber%20got%20%248%2C000%2C%20lost%20it%2 0when,stole%20his%20getaway%20car%3A%20FBI&text=CHICAGO%20%E2%80%94%20A%20Minnesota%20man%20t raveled,to%20a%20federal%20criminal%20complaint.