Germany hosts a real-life "Ocean's Eleven": Bank vaults drilled through and stolen 30 million euros

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German Gelsenkirchen Bank Robbed by Military-Grade Drilling Crew, €30 Million Stolen, Sparks Physical Vault Security Crisis
(Background: OpenAI founder Sam Altman’s ex-boyfriend robbed at gunpoint, BTC and ETH worth $11 million stolen)
(Additional context: Fake grenade raid on exchange! 21-year-old Russian man arrested on the spot)

Just after the Christmas holiday, the streets of Gelsenkirchen, an industrial city in western Germany, still adorned with Christmas lights, but bank staff woke up to a shocking scene on December 30th: a circular hole large enough for an adult to pass through appeared in the vault wall, over 90% of the safe deposit boxes were broken into, with an estimated loss of about €30 million (approximately NT$3.3 billion). This heist is like a real-life version of “Ocean’s Eleven,” not only stealing wealth but also shaking public confidence in the last line of defense of physical banks.

Surgical Operation on the Underground Vault

Investigations show that the criminal group carried out the attack during Christmas night from a blind spot in the adjacent parking lot, using a heavy industrial drill weighing 20 kilograms, combined with cooling water pipes and pumps, taking several hours to cut through 45 centimeters of reinforced concrete. After entering the vault, the thieves worked like an assembly line, continuously for three days, opening about 95% of the safe deposit boxes. The process was silent, with only the low-frequency vibration of the drill. According to News.az, the meticulousness and industrial-grade specifications of the operation led police to describe it as “like special forces doing engineering work.”

This “surgical operation” was not without clues. At 6:15 a.m. on December 27th, dust from drilling triggered a fire alarm. Police arrived and only conducted a visual inspection, deeming it a false alarm and leaving. 48 hours later, a second alarm sounded, revealing the true situation through the wall hole and cement debris on the ground. Surveillance footage captured a black Audi RS 6 loaded with loot leaving the scene, with a license plate from Hanover, 200 km away. The two false alarms highlight the gap between automated monitoring and human judgment, allowing the thieves to “work overtime” with ease at critical moments.

No Insurance Cover: Depositors’ Asset Black Hole

Victims gathered at the bank entrance, anxiously waiting for the inventory results. According to Anadolu Agency estimates, the loss exceeds €30 million, but most safe deposit boxes have insurance limits of only €10,000 to €12,000, far below the actual cash, gold, and jewelry stored inside. A man, with red eyes, said:

“That’s my retirement fund stored there for 25 years.”

The asymmetry between high-value assets and low insurance coverage turned safe deposit boxes into seemingly secure yet risky “insurance black holes.”

In 2025, amid global political and economic turmoil, many see physical vaults as safe havens. However, this heist revealed that the “last fortress of traditional finance” is also fragile. When the black Audi disappeared on the German highway, it took not only €30 million but also trust in physical bank defenses. Money stored in banks can also vanish into thin air. While traditional finance still emphasizes security and controllability, new-era stablecoins can be remotely frozen after theft. This case adds a new chapter to the evolving financial landscape.

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