Vintage wine worth almost
£1.5million has been stolen from the Royal Family’s supplier by thieves
who broke into a warehouse and crawled under laser beams – before
opening champagne to celebrate.
Using tactics often seen in
Hollywood heist movies, the gang put a ladder against the side of the
building to turn CCTV cameras the other way.
They then used power tools to cut a
4ft by 4ft hole in the wall before crawling under the motion sensors
which run along the side of the warehouse and trigger an alarm if they
detect movement.
After evading the beams, they used wine crates as ladders to climb up to the level where the most valuable vintages are stored.
For 3 hours they formed a chain and
passed wooden cases worth around £5,000 each along the floor before
pushing them through the hole and stacking them in their van.
French wines from Chateau Latour,
which are worth up to £1,000 a bottle, and Chateau Mouton-Rothschild
were among those taken from the warehouse in Basingstoke, Hampshire. The
thieves opened bottles of Moet & Chandon inside the warehouse
belonging to Berry Bros & Rudd to celebrate their success, it was
said.
Thursday, sources said the raid ‘had
to be an inside job’ because the thieves had an intimate knowledge of
the warehouse and its security systems.
‘They knew which way the CCTV cameras were facing and either avoided
them or climbed a ladder to move them,’ a source said. ‘And the hole in
the wall was cut in the perfect place. It was only inches
below the laser security beam. You could not have picked a better
spot.’ One source told how the thieves located a hidden security camera
inside the building and ‘adjusted’ it so that it would not capture
images of the raid.
‘There are members of staff who have worked at the warehouse for years
who didn’t know that camera existed,’ he said. ‘That’s impressive inside
knowledge.
‘And there are thousands of bottles inside, but they knew where to look.
The crates are stacked from Level A to Level F. They went straight to
Level B where the best wines are.
‘What I find staggering is that they then had a party to celebrate.’
The burglary at the warehouse, which
contains both wine for retail and wine which the company stores for
customers, took place in the early hours of the day.
The value of the stolen wine is
believed to be £1.38million. Hampshire Police confirmed that no arrests
have been made and said the ‘investigation is ongoing’.
Berry Bros & Rudd opened in St
James’s Street, London, in 1698 and has supplied wines to the Royal
Family since the reign of George III.
A spokesman said:
'We continue to work with the police and our security advisers to
prevent any incidents from happening again, and have further reinforced
the already high levels of security and monitoring at our facilities.’
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Title :
Thieves rob £1,000 bottles from the Queen's supplies
Description : Vintage wine worth almost £1.5million has been stolen from the Royal Family’s supplier by thieves who broke into a warehouse and crawl...
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