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Thursday 25 December 2014

Dash for cash! Frenzy on Hong Kong highway as drivers and pedestrians scramble to grab £1.25MILLION in bank notes from the road after van carrying money crashed

This was the scene when more than £1.25million in cash spilled out of an armoured van in Hong Kong - sparking a frenzy as passers-by tried to get their hands on the notes.


Traffic ground to a halt on Gloucester Road in central Hong Kong as taxi drivers rushed out of their cars to make a grab for the hundreds of banknotes scattered over the busy multi-lane highway. Television footage showed pedestrians dashing in from the pavements to join in the Christmas Eve melee. Police, some of them armed with armed with shotguns, helmets and bulletproof vests, rushed to the scene to secure the area.


Television footage showed pedestrians dashing in from the pavements to join in the Christmas Eve melee.
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This was the scene when more than £1.25million in cash spilled out of an armoured van in Hong Kong - sparking a frenzy as passers-by tried to get their hands on the notesThis was the scene when more than £1.25million in cash spilled out of an armoured van in Hong Kong - sparking a frenzy as passers-by tried to get their hands on the notes
This was the scene when more than £1.25million in cash spilled out of an armoured van in Hong Kong - sparking a frenzy as passers-by tried to get their hands on the notes

Police, some of them armed with armed with shotguns, helmets and bulletproof vests, rushed to the scene to secure the area.
More than HK$15.23million (£1.26million) spilled onto the road after the vehicle crashed, police said. 


It was not clear how much officers managed to retrieve and how much had been pocketed by members of the public.
'Any person who finds the relevant bank notes should return them to police as soon as possible, or they may be committing a theft,' police warned in a statement.
Television footage showed pedestrians dashing in from the pavements to join in the Christmas Eve meleeTelevision footage showed pedestrians dashing in from the pavements to join in the Christmas Eve melee
Television footage showed pedestrians dashing in from the pavements to join in the Christmas Eve melee

Police superintendent Wan Siu-hung said the driver of the van made it all the way to his destination, a half-hour's drive away, oblivious to the fact that his back door was open and the cash boxes had fallen out.
'When it (the van) arrived at its destination they discovered that the door was open,' Wan told reporters, adding that police would use the serial numbers of the bills to conduct an investigation.
Legal experts told local media that people who kept the banknotes would be committing larceny and could face up to 10 years in jail.

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