Man Photographed For Viral Photography Blog Claims He Robbed A Lot Of Banks
Brandon Stanton | Humans Of New York
We have no way of verifying this story, but in any case, the unnamed man had an interesting tale to tell. He said during his '90s bank heists he would hand tellers notes to get the cash, and that he never had to carry a gun. Because the security footage was blurry at best during the late '90s, he says, it was easy to get away with.
In a separate post Stanton published, the man said he didn't commit a crime until he was 54. Then, he says, he went on a bank robbing spree after pulling a heist for the first time.
It's been harder to rob banks these days, he says. The man says dye packs from banks exploded on him three separate times, with the worst occurring near Penn Station during the morning rush hour. He claims he heard a noise coming from his pants, followed by a bright neon cloud shooting up towards him. With many people watching, he tossed the money away, jumped in a cab, and went to a bar, according to his story.
In 1990, The New York Times reported a steep rise in bank robberies that was "baffling" both bankers and the FBI. From The Times:
Reasons for the increase are not clear. Law enforcement officials cite several possibilities: the spread of crack addiction, decreased attention by the authorities - who in some cases redeployed their forces against crack - and the recent return to the streets of some jailed bank robbers.
The banks hit most steadily, bank officials said, are midtown Manhattan branches. Most banks in poorer neighborhoods have installed teller windows of thick plastic while many midtown banks eschew them, and more robbers are blending into crowds or hopping on the subway instead of using getaway cars, the officials said.
During the late '90s, there were at least a couple of prominent bank robberies within New York, such as the 1998 heist from a Bank of America within the World Trade Center in addition to the "Seven-Second Bandit."
An NYPD spokesman told Business Insider the department is unable to identify a criminal based solely on a picture, although he advised sending the picture via email to the Deputy Commissioner of Public Information to see if the department can make a match. Business Insider is still waiting for that reply.
However, he added that if the man was never caught for any crime, there would be no way to identify him.
Brandon Stanton | Humans of New York
Here is the entire excerpt from the interview posted by Stanton, who gave us permission to use his pictures.
"It was the late 90's. The police commissioner had figured out that all the people committing small crimes were the same people committing big crimes, so the cops started cracking down on all the little stuff- and crime kept going down, down, down. Everything except bank robberies. Because all the big national banks were moving into the city, and buying out all the local banks. And these new corporate banks were all about 'customer service.' So they replaced the retired cops at the doors with 'greeters' who would give you coffee and donuts. So word got around fast that robbing banks was f***ing easy now. All you had to do was walk in, hand them a note, and they'd hand over the cash. I never even carried a gun. The security footage was so grainy back then, you could barely see anything. It was easy. It's much tougher these days. I've had dye packs explode on me three times. The worst was about a block from here. I had just left a bank, and was walking by the entrance to Penn Station during morning rush hour. Suddenly a noise starts coming from my pants, and a bright neon cloud starts shooting out. Hundreds of people were staring at me. I threw the thing away from me, hopped in a cab, and went to a bar."
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