The 10 Most BRILLIANT CRIMINALS in History! - Summary

Summary

The video presents the top 10 most brilliant criminals in history. The list includes:

1. The "Vacuum Gang" in France, who used a drill and vacuum to steal $800,000 from supermarkets.
2. The Credit Lien A's burglars, who tunneled into a bank in Paris and stole millions of euros.
3. The Pink Panthers, a Serbian gang that robbed over 120 jewelry stores in 20 countries.
4. Robert Karl Gaglio, an American thief who stole $2 million over 30 years using meticulous planning.
5. Derrick Birdie Smalls, a British robber who led a gang and stole £230,000 in a record heist.
6. The 300 million yen robber, who posed as a policeman to steal 300 million yen from a bank car in Japan.
7. The Boston art robbers, who stole $500 million worth of art from the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum.
8. The School of Turin, a group of thieves who robbed a bank in Belgium and made off with diamonds and paperwork.
9. The Baker Street burglars, who tunneled into a bank vault in London and stole £3 million.
10. DB Cooper, who hijacked a plane and jumped out with $200,000, never to be found.

The video showcases the clever and often daring methods used by these criminals to carry out their heists.

Facts

Here are the key facts extracted from the text:

1. A gang of thieves in France has been stealing money from supermarkets since 2006 using a drill and a modified vacuum.
2. The gang targets French supermarket chain Mano Pre by drilling into the delivery tubes near the safes.
3. They have successfully stolen at least $800,000 from 15 different stores.
4. Mano Pre has no plan to change their cash delivery system despite the losses.
5. The Credit Lien A's burglars stole millions of euros of cash and valuables from the Credit Lien A's Bank in Paris in 2010.
6. The thieves tunneled into the bank, subdued a guard, broke into the vault, and emptied 125 safety deposit boxes.
7. They set the building on fire, destroying evidence and allowing them to escape.
8. The heist took nine hours, and the thieves got away with it.
9. The Pink Panthers, a Serbian gang of jewel thieves, robbed 120 jewelry stores in over 20 countries.
10. They stole $108 million worth of jewelry in one heist and hid a diamond worth $500 million in a jar of face cream.
11. Robert Karl Gaguin, an American thief, robbed banks for 30 years, using meticulous planning and two getaway vehicles.
12. He was caught due to bad luck when two teenage boys discovered his cache of weapons and masks.
13. Gaguin is serving a 17-year sentence.
14. Derrick Birdie Smalls, a British robber, led a gang of thieves in the 1960s and 1970s, stealing millions of pounds.
15. He turned in his accomplices to avoid a 25-year prison sentence.
16. The 300 million yen robber, an unknown thief, stole 300 million yen (approximately $817,000) from a bank car in Japan in 1968.
17. The thief posed as a policeman and warned the guards of a bomb, allowing him to drive away with the cash.
18. The Boston art robbers stole an estimated $500 million worth of art from the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in 1990.
19. The thieves dressed as police officers and stole 13 pieces of artwork, including masterpieces by Rembrandt and Manet.
20. The statute of limitations has run out, and the thieves cannot be charged with a crime.
21. The School of Turin, a group of thieves led by Leonardo Notarbartolo, stole an estimated $100 million worth of diamonds and jewels in Antwerp.
22. The thieves planned the heist carefully, staying in the bank vault overnight and bypassing security systems.
23. Notarbartolo was caught due to DNA evidence found on a half-eaten sandwich.
24. The Baker Street burglars tunneled into the Lloyds Baker Street bank vault in London in 1971, stealing £3 million worth of cash and valuables.
25. The mastermind of the plot was never caught.
26. DB Cooper, an unknown thief, hijacked a Boeing 727 in 1971 and parachuted out with $200,000.
27. Cooper's true identity and fate remain unknown.

Note: Some of the facts are mentioned in a humorous or sarcastic tone, but I have tried to extract the objective facts from the text.