Swedes watch postal thieves board moving mail truck from car | iNFOnews | Thompson-Okanagan's News Source
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Swedes watch postal thieves board moving mail truck from car

Original Publication Date November 03, 2017 - 7:06 AM

COPENHAGEN - Sweden's postal service was puzzled when packages of electronics disappeared from its trucks on a road northeast of the country's second-largest city.

PostNord head of security Alexis Larsson says the service mounted concealed cameras inside the back of a postal truck in September to crack the thefts. The stolen items — mostly laptops, computers and smartphones — were estimated to be worth 2.5 million kronor (about $300,000).

The cameras provided a live feed of the PortNord truck. That's how Larsson was able to watch as two men leapt onto the moving truck from the hood of a car travelling behind it, entered the cargo area and rummaged through the load.

The truck was going 80 kph (50 mph) when the thieves boarded it, he told The Associated Press Friday.

The idea to equip a mail truck with a roving eye came about after PostNord noticed valuables vanishing from trucks travelling between Stockholm and Goteborg. The vehicles' padlocks had been cut and removed, leading Larsson and his team to conclude the thefts must have happened while the trucks were in transit.

After the camera caught the daring duo that broke into the truck while it was in motion, police were contacted and four men — all non-Swedes — were arrested on Sept. 16, during an operation involving unmarked police cars.

Charges against the men, who range in age between 30 and 45, are expected later this month. Larsson said they are suspected of being part of an international gang.

"This is a modus operandi that has been seen elsewhere in Europe, but it has been hard to prove," said Larsson, a former military officer who has worked in corporate security for the past 10 years.

"I think this is good for the shipping industry as a whole. We have been able to see how it happens," he said.

News from © The Associated Press, 2017
The Associated Press

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