Man facing charges of being crime gang ringleader

Man facing charges of being crime gang ringleader

17 October 2018

A CROSSGAR man is the suspected ringleader of a gang which stole more than £61,000 from a cash machine, the High Court heard last week.

The gang is also suspected of carrying out nearly 30 other raids across Northern Ireland.

Prosecutors said a dedicated team of detectives was probing all incidents being linked to a robbery where street lights were deactivated and telephone lines cut to prevent alarms being triggered.

The details emerged during a bail application by Romanian national Leonardo Petrovici (32), of Rannoche Close in Crossgar.

The gang is alleged to have plundered the ATM at a filling station on the Irvinestown Road in Trory, near Enniskillen, on August 2.

Petrovici denies charges of burglary and possessing criminal property.

Four other men and a woman are also accused of offences connected to the robbery in which a total of £61,340 was stolen.

Crown lawyer Adrian Higgins said street lighting, satellite dishes and electronic advertising in the area were all turned off before the raiders struck in the middle of the night.

Phone and broadband wires were also cut to ensure no security systems were activated.

The court heard an angle grinder was used to cut a hole in the door of the ATM facility, enabling access to the bank bunker storing the money.

Based on CCTV footage, the masked gang then allegedly retreated to a nearby field to check for any alarms before returning to steal the cash.

A Mercedes car believed to be linked to the break-in was later found at the address where Petrovici lives, according to the prosecution.

Searches of that property led to the recovery of around £25,000, Mr Higgins said. He claimed some of the money was located in sophisticated hides, including one plastered over and another behind skirting boards.

Tools, walkie-talkie radios, and gloves were seized. Bank of Ireland £10 and £20 notes similar to those stolen were allegedly found on some of the accused at the house.

With £35,000 taken from the cash machine still missing, Mr Higgins claimed it could be used to help Petrovici abscond if he were released from custody.

The barrister also contended: “Police believe he’s part of an organised crime gang responsible for carrying out some 27 further incidents with a similar modus operandi.

“There are a dedicated team of detectives investigating these incidents and police point to the reality that there’s been no similar burglaries occurring within Northern Ireland since this gang has been arrested and the applicant remanded in custody.”

A defence lawyer stressed that Petrovici had not been charged in connection with any of the other alleged raids.

He also submitted that his client has only been in Northern Ireland for a “short time”.

With the accused’s partner telling the court they arrived no more than six months ago, the bail application was adjourned for further checks to be carried out.