In a daring daylight robbery, armed men posing as officials from India’s central bank, the Reserve Bank of India, intercepted a cash-transport van in the bustling city of Bengaluru, Karnataka. The incident, which occurred on Wednesday afternoon, saw six men in an SUV stop the van on a busy road as it was transferring 70 million rupees ($800,000; £600,000) between bank branches. The van was carrying a driver, a cash custodian, and two armed security guards. The robbers, claiming to be RBI officials, demanded to verify the transport documents. They instructed the custodian and guards to leave their weapons in the van and enter the SUV, while the driver was told to continue driving with the cash. A few kilometers later, the gang forced the employees out of the SUV, returned to the van, and transferred the cash at gunpoint before fleeing the scene. The area had minimal CCTV coverage, complicating the investigation. Police are probing whether the gang used multiple vehicles and if the company employees were complicit. The SUV used in the heist had a fake number plate and a ‘Government of India’ sticker. Karnataka Chief Minister Siddaramaiah confirmed that the SUV has been recovered, but Home Minister G Parameshwara noted that the suspects likely switched vehicles to escape. Authorities remain confident in solving the case, drawing parallels to a recent high-profile gold theft in Vijayapura district, where 39kg of stolen gold was recovered and 15 individuals were arrested.
