"Once the two were inside the lobby, the defendant produced a fishing
type contraption ... he attempted to fish posted deposits out of the
safety boxes," police prosecutor Sergeant Rachel Willemsen told the
court.
"He's done this using the adhesive on the back of the safety deposit
bags and wrapped the adhesives around a metal washer ... and tied the
washer to the nylon dropping it into the boxes."
Travis managed to snag deposits which he put in his jacket.
He attempted the same thing at ASB Bank on July 2 but did not obtain any deposits. He tried it again at ASB on July 8 entering the lobby with a glove, nylon, metal washers and craft knife. "A security guard watched him doing this," said Ms Willemsen. Travis' lawyer, Anna Brosnahan, said Travis' financial problems had prompted his offending. "He'd recently lost his job, he separated from his partner of a substantial period of time and things weren't looking that good for him in terms of finances.
"It was period of desperation which is why he's done this all of a sudden, out of the blue." Judge David Cameron said it was 'very serious offending.' "This involves going into banks for illicit purposes." Judge Cameron hinted at imprisonment as a starting point for sentencing. "Otherwise it's not sending a sufficient message to the community that it won't be tolerated," he said. "The whole methodology has to be looked at. We've got someone cruising around targeting banks for personal gain." Travis was remanded on bail until September 7 for sentencing.
He attempted the same thing at ASB Bank on July 2 but did not obtain any deposits. He tried it again at ASB on July 8 entering the lobby with a glove, nylon, metal washers and craft knife. "A security guard watched him doing this," said Ms Willemsen. Travis' lawyer, Anna Brosnahan, said Travis' financial problems had prompted his offending. "He'd recently lost his job, he separated from his partner of a substantial period of time and things weren't looking that good for him in terms of finances.
"It was period of desperation which is why he's done this all of a sudden, out of the blue." Judge David Cameron said it was 'very serious offending.' "This involves going into banks for illicit purposes." Judge Cameron hinted at imprisonment as a starting point for sentencing. "Otherwise it's not sending a sufficient message to the community that it won't be tolerated," he said. "The whole methodology has to be looked at. We've got someone cruising around targeting banks for personal gain." Travis was remanded on bail until September 7 for sentencing.
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