Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
They have accused Brink's of negligently failing to properly secure the truck, since the rear doors had a simple padlock and security seal. Brink's in turn has sued to limit the payout to the declared value of the jewelry, accusing the jewelers of breach of contract. Estimates of its true value have reached $100 million, which would make it one ...
A Brink's van in Germany in 2008. The Brink's Company is an American cash handling company, headquartered in Richmond, Virginia.Its operations include cash-in-transit, ATM replenishment & maintenance, and cash management & payment services, such as vault outsourcing, money processing, intelligent safe services, and international transportation of valuables.
The timeline was first disclosed in an Aug. 4 lawsuit filed by Brink's against the affected jewelry companies, whose merchandise the company was transporting to the L.A. area for another trade ...
The Great Brink's Robbery was an armed robbery of the Brink's building in the North End of Boston, Massachusetts, on January 17, 1950. The $2.775 million ($35.1 million today) theft consisted of $1,218,211.29 in cash and $1,557,183.83 in checks, money orders, and other securities. It was at the time the largest robbery in the history of the ...
A bi-coastal barrage of outrage followed Gov. Cuomo’s last-second gift of clemency for a long-imprisoned ‘70s radical convicted for a botched 1981 Brink’s truck robbery that left two police ...
However, Brink's , a global secure logistics company providing services such. Logistic companies are typically perceived as cyclical and economically sensitive, suffering losses in poor economic ...
1981 Brink's robbery. The 1981 Brink's robbery was an armed robbery and three related murders committed on October 20, 1981, by several Black Liberation Army members and four former members of the Weather Underground, who were at the time associated with the May 19th Communist Organization. [1][2] The plan called for the BLA members ...
Margins matter. The more Brink's (NYS: BCO) keeps of each buck it earns in revenue, the more money it has to invest in growth, fund new strategic plans, or (gasp!) distribute to shareholders.