Is it wrong to be fascinated by heists? In the dead of night, robbers made away with a £1 billion haul from one of Europe’s most tightly-guarded castles. It’s a drama of Hollywood proportions. It is the early hours of Monday morning in the German city of Dresden. Under cover of darkness, the suspects start a small fire at an electrical facility. The blaze shuts down the fire alarms at the nearby Dresden Castle, home of the legendary Grunes Gewolbe - one of Europe's largest and most valuable jewellery collections. CCTV captures two men cutting through a fence and smashing a window to gain entrance to the vault. Within minutes, they have carried off more than 100 pieces of 18th-century jewellery. By the time police arrived, the suspects and their loot were nowhere to be found. They remain at large. Meanwhile, the people of Dresden have been left shocked by the theft of their richest treasures. "We cannot give a value because it is impossible to sell," said the director of Dresden's state art collections, Marion Ackermann. She revealed that the stolen items include three "priceless" sets of diamonds, while local police have released images of a diamond-encrusted sword and historic military medals. The theft has made headlines around the world. News websites are full of blueprints and maps, as commentators marvel at how the thieves pulled off such an audaciousBold. feat. "It was like a made-for-streaming drama," writes Frida Ghitis forn CNN. Why are we captivated by such a serious, anti-social crime? Our fascination with intricately-planned, flawlessly-executed heists is nothing new. In 1963, The Great Train Robbery made an international celebrity of Ronnie Biggs, who escaped prison to live in paradise for 36 years before the law caught up with him. In 2015, six hardened thieves robbed London's Hatton Garden Safe Deposit Company of 200 million. The story has already been made into three films and a prime-time television series. In Hollywood, the genre is so well-worn that studios are attempting to reinvent it with a cast of all-female robbers. In the last two years alone, we've had Widows, Hustlers and Ocean's 8. We wouldn't praise someone who broke into a house or mugged someone in the street, yet wilyClever and crafty. heist burglars are elevated to near-mythical antiheroes. Is it wrong to be fascinated by heists? Criminal minds Of course not, say some. These are not violent crimes. The best robbers are in and out without anyone noticing. But it's impossible not to admire their cunning intelligence: carrying off a hoard of priceless jewels is not easy. It must be planned in minute detail by a true mastermind. There is a certain perverse bravery to these heists that captivates the imagination. But others say we must heed the words of Justice Edmund Davies, who sentenced Ronnie Biggs: "Let us clear out of the way any romantic notions of daredevilry. This is nothing less than a sordid crime of violence inspired by vast greed." Yesterday, the leader of SaxonyA small eighteenth-century German country that today is a state of Germany. said that the entire state is bereft, robbed of its history. These crimes have real victims. It is a failure of empathyThe capacity to understand and feel the suffering of others. to idolise the perpetrators. KeywordsAudacious - Bold.
Is it wrong to be fascinated by heists? In the dead of night, robbers made away with a £1 billion haul from one of Europe's most tightly-guarded castles. It's a drama of Hollywood proportions.
Criminal minds
Keywords
Audacious - Bold.
Wily - Clever and crafty.
Saxony - A small eighteenth-century German country that today is a state of Germany.
Empathy - The capacity to understand and feel the suffering of others.
Priceless jewels swiped in dramatic heist
Glossary
Audacious - Bold.
Wily - Clever and crafty.
Saxony - A small eighteenth-century German country that today is a state of Germany.
Empathy - The capacity to understand and feel the suffering of others.