A 16-year-old teenager and a man aged 38 who caused an explosion at a cash machine in Starbeck were sentenced today.
Frederick Squires, of Castleacre Road, Swaffham, Norfolk and the teenager from Doncaster, who cannot be named, targeted cash machines across Yorkshire and Leicestershire whilst driving a stolen vehicle.
Squires was sentenced to eight years and six months in prison at York Crown Court and was disqualified from driving for seven years and three months.
The 16-year-old received a two-year detention and training order.
Both men were charged with conspiracy to commit burglaries and conspiracy to cause explosions. Squires was also charged with aggravated vehicle taking.
Lit a fuse
The offences, which began on March 4, were caught on CCTV, which showed them driving the stolen vehicle using cloned registration plates.
The men pumped gas into a cash machine at the post office in Shepshed, Leicestershire at 12.30am and then lit a fuse to cause an explosion.
This attempt was unsuccessful so they moved on to the Jet garage in Adwick, near Doncaster at about 3.15am. Using the same tactics they stole £35,130 in cash cassettes.
Two days later they targeted the cash machine at the Co-op on the High Street in Starbeck shortly after 1am. This attempt was unsuccessful.
At about 2am on March 10, North Yorkshire Police officers spotted the stolen vehicle near York.
100mph chase
In a 100mph chase, the vehicle drove the wrong way round a roundabout before travelling along the wrong side of the A64 dual carriageway and shortly after crashed into the car park barriers at the York Designer Outlet.
Officers were unable to locate the suspects until a helicopter spotted a heat source close to the River Ouse. Officers located the suspects hiding in a tree trunk and they were subsequently arrested.
Squires pleaded guilty to all charges and the 16-year-old youth was found guilty following trial. A third man, who cannot currently be named for legal reasons, plead guilty to all charges but will be sentenced at a later date.
Detective superintendent Fran Naughton, of North Yorkshire Police, said:
“The sentences given to these two individuals today are a clear demonstration that this type of crime will not be tolerated, either in North Yorkshire or across the country.
"Setting off an explosion inside an ATM is extremely dangerous, particularly one on a fuel station forecourt, and showed no regard for the safety of local residents in the properties nearby.
“Added to all of this are the highly irresponsible actions of the driver as they fled from the police, endangering the lives of many road users and causing further damage."
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Sarah Staff, head of SaferCash, the security initiative hosted by the British Security Industry Association, said: “This series of ATM attacks were potentially extremely dangerous to the public and had a significant impact on local communities that rely upon these services and their access to cash.
“The outcome of today’s sentences will be a strong deterrent to those involved in similar offending."
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