3 men convicted in London jewelry district heist

An undated image from CCTV made available by the Metropolitan police of a male at the fire escape corridor, shown as evidence to jurors in the Hatton Garden Safe Deposit Company raid trial at Woolwich Crown Court, London, England. Metropolitan Police Photo via AP

LONDON — Three men were convicted Thursday of involvement in raiding a safe deposit in a London jewelry district, an audacious 14 million-pound ($20 million) heist that prosecutors called the largest burglary in English history.

The haul included gold, diamond and sapphire jewelry, cash and other valuables belonging to local jewelers in Hatton Garden.

Carl Wood, William Lincoln and Hugh Doyle, aged 48 to 60, were found guilty Thursday of being involved in the burglary. A fourth man, taxi driver Jon Harbinson, was cleared. Four other men aged 58 to 76, described as the ringleaders of the gang, pleaded guilty earlier.

The details of the carefully-planned heist — not least the advanced ages of the thieves — have fascinated Britain. One lawyer in the case said the crime was worthy of turning into a movie called "Bad Grandpas."

The men chose the Easter holiday weekend last year to carry out the crime, and were able to secure their break-in to a safe deposit facility in the jewelry quarter over two nights virtually without anyone noticing.

Disguised as workmen and dressed in fluorescent vests and hard hats, the thieves entered carrying bags and wheeled garbage bins for carrying off the booty.

Police said that on the first night, the gang climbed 12 to 14 feet (around four meters) down an elevator shaft but failed to access the deposit boxes. They returned the following night with more equipment, and successfully climbed into the vault through a hole they drilled in a thick cement wall. They then spent the whole night in the vault ransacking 73 deposit boxes.

It wasn't until security workers returned to work on Tuesday that the crime was discovered. Police have apologized for failing to respond to a midnight alarm that sounded at the start of the holiday weekend.

Detectives said there was no evidence that the raid was an inside job. Rather, they said the men meticulously researched and planned the heist months in advance over drinks in pubs, working out all the obstacles they would face.

Only part of the stolen goods has been recovered, and one of the key suspects — a man known only as "Basil" who let the others into the building — hasn't yet been identified and police are still investigating his whereabouts.

All the men are due to be sentenced on March 7.

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