Hicksville, NY – $1.8 Million Burglary Of Armored Car Company Foiled By Alert Officer

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    Nassau County Police Chief of Detectives Kevin Smith speaks with reporters on Aug. 27, 2015 in Mineola, N.Y., as he stands in front of a board showing crime scene photos of a botched burglary at an armored car company in Hicksville, N.Y. Authorities say a group of sophisticated burglars penetrated a vault of a Long Island armored car company and stole $1.8 million on Aug. 16, 2015, but were foiled by an alert police officer. (AP Photo/Mike Balsamo)Hicksville, NY – A group of sophisticated burglars penetrated a vault at an armored car company on Long Island and nearly made off with $1.8 million, but their escape was foiled by an alert policeman on patrol near the remote office park, officials said Thursday.

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    Edgar Medina, 53, of Brentwood, was charged with burglary, grand larceny and possession of burglars’ tools in connection with the Aug. 16 break-in at the Loomis Armored Inc. warehouse in Hicksville. Up to four other suspects are being sought.

    “This was an extremely sophisticated burglary,” Nassau County’s acting police commissioner Thomas Krumpter said at a news conference. “This is a hardened property that is designed to secure large amounts of currency.”

    Medina and between two and four other suspects, who police are now trying to find, were caught on video before they allegedly broke through a concrete wall and into the company’s vault, police said. As the assailants were offloading the cash into a waiting car, the police officer pulled up, authorities said.

    Chief of Detectives Kevin Smith said Medina spotted the officer coming and then “appears to throw something in the trunk and slam the trunk.” Medina sped off, leading the officer on a brief pursuit before he was stopped a few blocks away, police said. When the officer looked in his trunk, he saw large plastic bags filled with cash.

    Additional officers found a substantial hole in the wall and video surveillance shows the suspects, all wearing masks, tampering with wiring that control’s the building’s alarm, Smith said. A sledgehammer and hydrologic jack were left at the scene.

    “Basically, it appears that they’re casing the place. They’re looking into vehicles, they seem to be looking at, choosing perhaps, their access point into the building,” Smith said of the video. “They appear to be tampering with the wires of the security system.”

    Danny Peck, a senior vice president for risk management at the armored car company, said he was “pleased” with the police officer’s actions, but declined to comment on the burglary. Workers from a vault repair company were at the warehouse Thursday afternoon.

    A working phone number for Medina’s attorney could not be located. He is being held in lieu of $150,000 bail.


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