Posted inCulture & Society

Suspect held over Dubai ‘Pink Panther’ robbery in 2007

Borko Ilincic thought to be part of gang which carried out $15m jewellery raid at Wafi Mall

A suspected member of the Pink Panthers gang, which was involved in a AED55 million ($15 million) robbery at Wafi Mall in Dubai in 2007, has been arrested by Spanish police, Interpol has announced.

Borko Ilincic is the subject of an Interpol Red Notice, or international wanted persons alert, which was issued at the request of the UAE after the Wafi Mall robbery when the suspects escaped with a huge haul of jewellery after driving their vehicles through the shop window.

The 33-year-old Serbian national, who was using a false name and fraudulent Bosnian passport, was arrested in Alcala de Henares on the outskirts of Madrid on Tuesday, Interpol said in a statement.

In December, police became suspicious of the activities of a group of individuals and, following message exchanges via Interpol with Serbia and Switzerland, identified Ilincic as a Red Notice subject as part of Project Pink Panthers, the statement added.

Jean-Michel Louboutin, executive director of Police Services, said: “This case is a perfect example of the successes which can be achieved through international cooperation and the added value that Interpol brings in assisting law enforcement exchange vital policing information.”

“The arrest of Ilincic, who has been in Interpol’s databases for a long time, goes to show that the law does not just have a long arm, it also has a long memory,” added Louboutin.

The Wafi Mall robbery was a key driver in the creation of Interpol’s Project Pink Panthers in 2007 to coordinate global activities after DNA profiles sent by the UAE from the Dubai robbery were matched against others submitted to the Interpol General Secretariat from a robbery in Lichtenstein in 2006, revealing that the armed robbery ring was active not just in Europe, but around the world.

The main objective of Project Pink Panthers is to centralise information related to the suspects of such crimes, identifying material, the crimes in which they are involved in, and their criminal partnerships and contacts.

The group is believed to include approximately 800 individuals responsible for nearly 300 robberies in 35 countries since 1999, with the value of stolen jewellery estimated at more than EUR350 million.

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