FOOL'S GOLD

How Brink’s-Mat robbery turned into curse – with trail of murders including axe killings & chained bodies dumped at sea

THE last thing guard Robin Riseley and his colleague saw before a hood was thrown over their head and they were doused in petrol was a pistol pointed at them.

Miraculously, the robbers didn't carry through with their threats to set them alight, however, as they went on to discover £26million worth of gold in the warehouse on Heathrow’s perimeter - £23million more than they expected.

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The warehouse that was the scene of the Brink's-Mat gold bullion robberyCredit: Alamy
Some Brink's-Mat gold now stored at the Bank of England MuseumCredit: photoshot

They ultimately pulled off the Crime of the Century on November 26, 1983 - now known as the Brink's-Mat bullion robbery - stealing 6,800 gold ingots, diamonds and cash, which would be worth £100million today.

The brains behind the operation was Brian “The Colonel” Robinson, who recently died penniless in a nursing home at ­Kidbrooke, South East London.

He wasn't the only one involved to reach an unfortunate end though, as the heist unleashed a trail of bloody murders, endless crimes and jail terms - as well as a global hunt for the treasure.

Here we look back over the shocking robbery...

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in 2003, Scouse recalled how their colleague, Tony Black, had been running late that morning.

When he did show up, he feigned going to the toilet - before letting the other robbers inside. It turned out, he'd been working as their inside man all along.

"The first thing I knew was a man pointing a semi-automatic pistol at my face and telling us all to hit the floor," Riseley told the news outlet.

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