Originally published Thursday, October 23, 2008 at 12:00 AM
Comments (3)
E-mail article
Print view
FBI: 2 Ballard banks thwart robbery with great customer service
A warm greeting and attentive customer service likely helped two Ballard banks avoid being robbed earlier this week, according to the FBI.
Seattle Times staff reporter
A warm greeting and attentive customer service likely helped two Ballard banks avoid being robbed earlier this week, according to the FBI.
Police said a suspicious-looking man walked into the First Mutual Bank branch on 15th Avenue Northwest on Tuesday afternoon. He was immediately recognized by employees who'd seen his photo on a flier as a suspect in previous robberies, said FBI Special Agent Larry Carr.
Instead of waiting for the man to make it to the teller's counter, an employee immediately greeted the man, treated him as a valued customer and offered to help him at a desk.
The man left without seeing a teller, Carr said. First Mutual employees then called a nearby U.S. Bank branch to warn them that the man might be headed to the bank.
A few minutes later, a man matching the suspect's description walked into the U.S. Bank branch, where employees provided similar service.
The man again left empty-handed, Carr said.
The man remains at large, he said. He also is a suspect in a Oct. 16 robbery at a bank at Sandpoint Way Northeast and a second robbery Wednesday at a Bellevue bank.
Carr said employees at the two banks utilized a robbery prevention technique in which employees help divert would-be robbers from their goal of getting to the cash and out of the bank quickly and quietly.
By focusing attention in the guise of good customer service on all who enter a bank, Carr says, bank employees can unnerve robbers, who generally try to remain as anonymous as possible when approaching a teller. The ploy specifically targets so-called "note jobs," in which a robber passes a note demanding cash to a teller, Carr said. He estimates 90 percent of bank robberies in the Seattle area are note jobs.
"If a person is a legitimate customer, they will experience superior service," Carr said. "If their intention, however, is to rob the bank, they will experience paranoia, anxiety and a desire to escape."
First Mutual employees were the first to adopt the technique, dubbed "Operation SafeCatch," which was developed by Carr and introduced last year.
Since then, Carr said 50 bank branches have participated in training and bank robberies in the area have plummeted.
![]()
"It's changing the mindset," said Carr, who has interviewed thousands of bank robbers, tellers and other bank employees.
"What I was seeing were situations in which employees knew the minute someone walked in the door that they were going to be robbed. But their mindset was, 'All we can do is wait,' " he said.
"Now, we're empowering them to take control of the environment," he said. "It completely changes the dynamic, and it doesn't cost a thing,"
Christine Clarridge: 206-464-8983 or cclarridge@seattletimes.com
Copyright © 2008 The Seattle Times Company
NEW - 11:19 PM
Bombs, guns found at home of suspect in Officer Brenton's slaying
NEW - 12:13 AM
How an underdog named Mike McGinn took City Hall
Danny Westneat: Lee the Horse Logger found slow wagon shrank tumor
Parents want answers on new Seattle school boundaries
3 Cascade Mountain passes close due to snow; more rain, wind expected Sunday

Mourners gather at KeyArena for slain officer's memorial
Mourners gathered at KeyArena for the memorial service of Seattle police Officer Timothy Brenton on November 6, 2009.
nwjobs

Post a comment

Michelle Goodman blogs about work/life balance.
How to tell your office you're gravely ill
Post a comment
nwautos

Choosing a new sedan? Weigh the impact of your choice on your wallet and on the planet.
Post a comment
- Flags were key link to cop slaying, bombings
- Suspect shot as city mourns slain officer
- Briefs | Soccer: New Mexico suspends hair-pulling player Elizabeth Lambert
- McGinn pulling away as late ballots come in
- Using anti-shooter tactics, civilian Army police officer brought down gunman
- Huskies suffer another heartbreaking loss to UCLA
- Consortium on verge of owning Eastside railway land
- Suspect in officer's slaying shot by police
- Heavy snow in Cascades shuts down roads
- Stormy weather to continue today in the Seattle area
- UCLA game thread
937 - Suspect shot as city mourns slain officer
389 - Weapons, bomb-making materials found in suspect's apartment
331 - Troubling portrait emerges of Fort Hood suspect
285 - Decision day for health care in the House
193 - McGinn widens lead over Mallahan in Seattle mayoral race
183 - Schools emerge as new tactic in gay marriage votes
98 - Huskies suffer another heartbreaking loss to UCLA
86 - Using anti-shooter tactics, civilian Army police officer brought down gunman
71 - Referendum 71 show's Washington's strategy for marriage equality is working
70
- Suspect shot as city mourns slain officer
- Recipe: Penne with Smoked Turkey Sausage
- Suspect in officer's slaying shot by police
- Flags were key link to cop slaying, bombings
- Nancy Leson | An elegant offshoot of Seattle's Wild Ginger in Bellevue
- Voters expand same-sex rights
- Shoreline man killed when struck by falling tree part
- Tim Lincecum charged with misdemeanor possession
- Do It in a Day | Spend a cozy, homey day in Edmonds
- Green River Valley: Anxiety ebbs over flooding potential









