Sunday, 14 April 2013

French police hunt gangster after dramatic prison break!



Forensics experts at Sequedin prison on Saturday near a door blasted open by inmate Redoine Faid. French police were on a manhunt Sunday for a notorious armed robber who staged a dramatic prison break in northern France after briefly taking several guards hostage
 Forensics experts at Sequedin prison on Saturday near a door blasted open by inmate Redoine Faid. 


French police were on a manhunt Sunday for a notorious armed robber who staged a dramatic prison break in northern France after briefly taking several guards hostage.

Lille prosecutor Frederic Fevre said about 100 investigators were involved  in the hunt for Redoine Faid, known for brazen attacks on cash-in-transit vehicles, after he blasted his way out of a jail in the northern town of Sequedin on Saturday.

Faid, a 40-year-old who risked a heavy new sentence over the 2010 death of  a policewoman, used explosives to blast through five prison doors and took  hostage four prison guards, who were later released.
Investigators were Sunday trying to determine how Faid had managed to  obtain explosives inside the prison and whether he had any accomplices.
A thorough investigation has begun. Obviously he had one or more  accomplices. The investigators will now determine how he was able to obtain explosives and a weapon,” Fevre told AFP.
On Sunday police detained a brother who had regularly visited Faid in  prison for questioning, Fevre said.
No potential lead can be ignored. The doors must be closed one after the  other,” he said, adding that the brother had been at the prison on Saturday to  meet Faid but had not been able to do so.
French officials have warned that Faid is considered armed and “especially dangerous”.   
France has issued a Europe-wide arrest warrant and called in Interpol for help, amid fears he may have already fled across the border into Belgium.
Police have said the breakout was planned with meticulous precision and authorities have insisted there was no fault on the part of prison workers.

Redoine Faid
A getaway car used in the escape was found burnt in Lille, where Faid is believed to have switched to a second vehicle. Of the four hostages he escaped  with, one was released just outside the prison, another a few hundred metres (yards) away and the last two along the highway.
Faid is known for co-authoring two books after a decade in prison for robbery, about his delinquent youth and rise as a criminal in Paris’s impoverished suburbs.
He said his life of crime was inspired by American films such as “Scarface” and “Heat” — where Robert De Niro’s armoured car heist has been cited as the  model for real life attacks in South Africa, Colombia and other countries.
Movies for me were like a user’s guide for armed robbery,” he told the LCI  news channel when his autobiography was released in 2010.  
After his first robbery, Faid, of Algerian extraction, fled to Israel where he wore the Jewish skullcap and picked up Hebrew to blend in.
Despite vowing he had turned his back on crime, Faid was in 2010 suspected of being the mastermind of an armed robbery in which a young policewoman was  killed in a shootout.
Faid, nicknamed “The Writer”, landed back in prison in 2011 for failing to  comply with his parole conditions and was due to serve the remaining eight  years of his original sentence.
He potentially faced 30 more years over the policewoman’s death

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