The identification of a violent gang of armed robbers began with a remarkable bit of detective work by Scotland Yard’s elite Flying Squad.
It led to the capture of 10 members of a highly organised gang who used guns, knives, hammers and crowbars to attack security guards refilling cash machines in London and elsewhere.
The investigation began as detectives picked over the few clues left by two robbers who pounced at midnight on guards entering a Nationwide bank in Tooting, south London, in June 2018.
The guards were carrying £120,000 to put into a cashpoint, the bank’s automated teller machine (ATM).
The robbers wore nondescript black clothes, body armour, masks and gloves. They left no DNA or fingerprints.
Internal CCTV cameras revealed no distinguishing features. CCTV outside the High Street bank showed nothing of the robbers at all, or any getaway vehicle.
More from UK
The side door
The front of the bank was hidden from cameras by the parked cash van. Also obscured was a door right beside the bank’s entrance. Puzzled detectives concluded the robbers must have arrived and departed on foot through that other door.
Advertisement
The door led to a block of flats and, via a fire escape, to a supermarket car park and a network of side streets. CCTV cameras there picked up the two suspects walking at around the time of the robbery.
Another camera further away showed them arriving in a dark sport utility vehicle (SUV), but the picture quality was poor, the number plate was unreadable and the car’s make and model uncertain.
Detective Constable Stephen O’Connell said: “It looked like an Audi Q7 or similar type vehicle, but you can see it’s not an Audi from close inspection of the wing mirrors, the types of alloy wheels on it and the shape of the bonnet, badge and the grille.”
In a bid to identify the car, he asked for footage from all traffic cameras with automatic number plate recognition (ANPR) within a four-kilometre range of the bank.
DC O’Connell explains how the investigation progressed: “We’re confident that it’s a Skoda Kodiaq SUV, but we can’t read the number plate.
“The ANPR camera search reveals that there is a Skoda Kodiaq travelling in one of the side streets close to the bank minutes after the robbery.”
The Birmingham connection
The traffic camera showed a clear number plate which belonged to a Skoda Kodiaq advertised on the car sales website AutoTrader from a showroom in Birmingham.
DC O’Connell said: “I speak to the manager there, and he’s certain that his vehicle hasn’t been in London, it’s sitting in his dealership and is locked in. He’s got the keys at home.
“So the gang have obviously seen his advert in AutoTrader and they’ve copied the index plate and put it onto another Skoda Kodiaq.”
The reason the gang copied a genuine number plate from a registered blue Skoda Kodiaq, instead of say a white Ford Focus, was in case the car was stopped by police for any reason.
A check on the number plate would show police it belonged to a blue Skoda Kodiaq and that should be enough to allay any suspicion.
Of course, a more detailed check on the gang’s Skoda would reveal it had the wrong number plate, but that was a calculated risk.
The next thing the Flying Squad did was to trawl through local crime logs to find a Skoda Kodiaq that had been stolen. They planned to search back two months, but they quickly found one stolen in Wimbledon a fortnight before the robbery.
ANPR cameras showed the car being driven around for an hour after it was stolen, but then it disappeared.
The Prague connection
Police contacted Skoda headquarters, in the Czech capital Prague, where the company keeps a record of every car it manufactures.
Skoda gave detectives the unique code for the stolen car’s satellite navigation system. The code allows the satnav to work by connecting to telecommunications masts, rather like a mobile phone.
Detectives asked the satnav’s telecoms provider for the car’s data history.
The data wasn’t as precise as they hoped, but it showed the satnav was turned off somewhere in Wimbledon, not far from where the Skoda was stolen.
Going underground
The squad flooded the area with undercover officers, but they couldn’t find the car parked on the street. Then they knocked on the door of the concierge at a new block of flats with a secure, shuttered underground car park.
In the car park was a blue Skoda Kodiaq, but it had a different number plate from the one on the Skoda used in the robbery. A check on the Vehicle Identity Number (VIN), or chassis number, inside the car showed it was the stolen Skoda they were looking for.
“So, we’re thinking, why have they changed the number plates on it again? They haven’t just abandoned this car. They’ve parked it up, they’ve re-plated it, they must be going to use it again.
“So rather than just seize it and take the opportunity to get DNA and fingerprints from it, we’ll leave it there and keep observations on it, and we’ll see who comes to it.” But they didn’t have to wait for that.
Not quite clever enough
When they checked the recent car park CCTV it showed a man drive in, park in resident’s bay 248, appear to change the Skoda’s number plates and then climb the stairs to the flats above.
A check with the block’s manager showed the resident with parking bay 148 was a man called David Tesfaalem in flat 30.
“We look at the name David Tesfaalem and, lo and behold, he has previous convictions for armed robbery,” said DC O’Connell.
The gang had been clever, but not quite clever enough.
A big surveillance operation on Tesfaalem eventually led the detectives to the other gang members and their wave of violent robberies was stopped.
Warnings of widespread disruption caused by freezing weather have been issued, with temperatures expected to plummet to as low as -16C in some areas.
Snow, ice and fog warnings have been issued, following on from severe weather on Wednesday, with the South West and south of England particularly affected by heavy snow.
All of the warnings are yellow, meaning there is a danger of injury from slips and falls and some disruption to travel expected.
Devon and Cornwall saw roads closed and motorists stationary for “long periods of time”, a joint statement from Devon and Cornwall Police and Devon County Council Highways said.
Snow ploughs became stuck in queues of traffic caused by “minor incidents”, the statement added.
X
This content is provided by X, which may be using cookies and other technologies.
To show you this content, we need your permission to use cookies.
You can use the buttons below to amend your preferences to enable X cookies or to allow those cookies just once.
You can change your settings at any time via the Privacy Options.
Unfortunately we have been unable to verify if you have consented to X cookies.
To view this content you can use the button below to allow X cookies for this session only.
A yellow warning for snow and ice is in place for northern Scotland until midnight on Thursday and another snow and ice warning is in force for Northern Ireland until 11am on Thursday as sleet and snow showers are set to continue.
Meanwhile, a yellow fog warning has been issued for Northern Ireland until 9am on Thursday.
A further yellow warning for snow and ice affecting Cornwall, much of Wales and parts of northwest England has been issued until 11am on Thursday.
And a yellow ice warning has been issued for parts of southern England and south-east Wales until 10.30am on Thursday.
Travel disruption to road and rail services are likely on Thursday in the warning areas, as well as the potential for accidents in icy places, the forecaster said.
As icy conditions persist, motorists are being urged to stick to major roads that are most likely to have been gritted.
Car insurer RAC said it has seen the highest levels of demand for rescues in a three-day period since December 2022.
The UK may have reached peak obesity and rates could start falling rapidly later this year, Sky News has been told.
Data collected by one of the biggest online sellers of weight loss jabs suggests that so many people are now taking effective medication that the inexorable rise in obesity could start to reverse.
According to Simple Online Pharmacy, which has access to wholesale figures, 500,000 people in the UK are currently taking either Mounjaro or Wegovy – and they can expect to lose 15% to 20% of their weight over a matter of months.
Rebecca Moore, the company’s chief operating officer, said: “Our projections are that around a million people will reverse their obesity in a year.
“We should be at the point now, we believe, where we’re starting to see rates decline.
“We would not be surprised if by the end of this year we’ve seen a really significant decline in obesity.”
The company has supplied the drugs to 200,000 people, who have collectively lost 600 tonnes of their weight.
Demand for medication is growing by 10% to 40% month-on-month, and the company has had to build a walk-in fridge to store enough medication to supply 400 patients an hour.
“The narrative has really shifted in the last few months,” said Ms Moore.
“People are recognising that obesity is a lifelong chronic condition. They’re recognising that this medication is a once-in-a-generation revolutionary technology.
“People are much more open to it and I expect that next year there will be another huge surge in growth.”
Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player
2:33
The weight-loss drug that’s ‘too good’
Latest NHS figures show 27% of adults in England are obese, up from 15% in 1993.
Rates have started to plateau in the last couple of years as public health measures such as the sugar tax take effect.
But there are indications that obesity jabs have already begun to reverse obesity in the US and the same is likely to happen in the UK.
Around 95% of all patients using the medication are buying it privately, at a cost of around £150 a month.
Access on the NHS is poor, with research by Sky News showing just 800 patients had been prescribed Wegovy in specialist clinics four months after the rollout started in December 2023. That’s just 6% of the expected number.
And last month the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) bowed to demands from the NHS to restrict access to Mounjaro to just 200,000 of 3.4 million eligible patients over the first three years of the rollout.
Sarah Le Brocq, founder of All About Obesity, sits as a patient representative on the NICE committee.
She said it was “hugely frustrating” that so many patients in need are being denied treatment.
“It’s not the NHS’s fault that they can’t fund these drugs,” she said.
“They need to have that money coming through [from government] because they can’t take it from cancer and put it into obesity.
“We are going to have tiered access. The wealthy can be healthy, but people who really need treatment can’t have it.”
Angela Chesworth had to do a ‘clinical trial’ of treatment on herself to prove to the NHS that the drugs could stop agonising abdominal pains that she suffered several times a week.
Her consultant had agreed that her extra pounds were pulling on scar tissue from previous stomach surgery, but he was powerless to prescribe the treatment.
But since the summer, when she started weekly injections of Mounjaro, she has only had a couple of abdominal cramps and the NHS has now agreed to fund treatment.
“When you know there’s something out there that can help you, but you can’t have that help because of money or somebody who makes the rules, you feel worthless,” she told Sky News.
“Come and live in my shoes and see how I am and see how it affects me and then tell me I’m not worth the money.
“You want me to be part of society, you want me to do a job, you want me to expand the economy?
“I needed help, so it was very frustrating to be told no. And especially by the medical professionals.”
Her husband, Paul, is still having to buy his supply privately, despite being on the cusp of type 2 diabetes. After three months of treatment, he has lost two stone and is now healthy.
“I want to be healthy as long as I possibly can,” he said.
“For the last 15 years of his life my dad did not have good health or a good quality of life. He wasn’t able to get up in the morning quickly and ended up on a mobility scooter because he couldn’t walk far.
“All those things I want to try and avoid.”
The Department of Health said new drugs recommended by NICE need to be funded from existing NHS budgets. A spokesperson added: “We are also acting to tackle [obesity’s] causes, shifting our focus from treatment to prevention as part of our 10 Year Health Plan.”
Grocery shoppers are being warned of more hikes to food costs in the months ahead due to retailers passing on the cost of budget tax rises.
The British Retail Consortium (BRC) warned that food prices will increase by an average of 4.2% in the latter half of the year – piling more pressure on households at a time when consumers are already facing leaps in unavoidable costs including water, council tax and energy bills.
It blamed the impact of budget measures announced by Chancellor Rachel Reeves in October, which businesses have widely denounced as an attack on investment, jobs, and pay.
The retail body spoke up as many top retail brands reported on their Christmas progress ahead of April’s looming surge in costs.
Tesco warned of a £250m annual impact from higher employer National Insurance contributions alone from the next financial year while maintaining its annual profit forecast for 2024/25.
It cheered winning considerable market share over the festive season, leaving the UK’s biggest retailer in its best position since 2016.
More from Money
M&S reported robust growth in food sales, by 8.9% on a comparable basis, while growth in clothing and home and beauty was up by almost 2%.
Industry data released earlier this week already revealed Tesco, Sainsbury’s, Lidl and M&S were the big sales winners over Christmas, as far as groceries were concerned. Asda and the Co-op were seen as the main strugglers.
Ocado, which has a retail partnership with M&S, saw the largest growth in the online sphere.
Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player
0:38
Warning of price hikes ahead
Much of the focus, however, is on the future given the volume of complaints within the sector – one of the country’s biggest employers – about the budget measures.
The key message since the fiscal event has been that shoppers will pay a price.
The industry sales data, revealed by Kantar Worldpanel on Tuesday, showed the annual rate of grocery price inflation at 3.7% in the four-week December period, its highest level since March, and a jump on the 2.6% reported for the 12 months to November.
Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player
The BRC’s chief executive, Helen Dickinson, said on Thursday: “As retailers battle the £7bn of increased costs in 2025 from the budget, including higher employer NI (National Insurance), National Living Wage, and new packaging levies, there is little hope of prices going anywhere but up.
“Modelling by the BRC and retail chief financial officers suggest food prices will rise by an average of 4.2% in the latter half of the year, while non-food will return firmly to inflation.
“Government can still take steps to mitigate these price pressures, and it must ensure that its proposed reforms to business rates do not result in any stores paying more in rates than they do already.”
Despite the looming pressure ahead on supermarket margins from the budget, it is clear that grocery chains had a robust Christmas season.
Tesco boss Ken Murphy said: “We delivered our biggest-ever Christmas, with continued market share growth and switching gains.
“Our strong performance reflects the investments we have made, positioning Tesco as the UK’s cheapest full-line grocer for over two years, improving quality across all our ranges, with more than half of this year’s Christmas range new or improved, and providing the best experience for our customers in-store and online.”
His counterpart at M&S, Stuart Machin, said: “The external environment remains challenging, with cost and economic headwinds to navigate, but there is much within our control.
“At M&S, we stay close to our customers and their needs, and with that in mind our investment in trusted value, along with great quality, style and innovation remains our priority.”