French police arrest nine over brazen Saudi convoy carjacking

18 May 2015 / 20:50 H.

    PARIS: French police arrested nine people on Monday in connection with a spectacular robbery on the convoy of a Saudi prince in Paris last year that netted the thieves 250,000 euros.
    The suspects were picked up in the Paris region and are now in custody, a police source told AFP.
    The attack on the prince's convoy took place in August in northern Paris as the motorcade was making its way from a plush hotel on the Champs Elysees to an airport in Le Bourget.
    A gang of "between five and eight" thieves in two BMWs hijacked the first of around 10 vehicles in the convoy, driving off with the three occupants before letting them go, police said.
    The Saudis' Mercedes and one of the thieves' BMWs were later found abandoned and burned out in the village of Saint-Mesmes, to the northeast of Paris, approximately 40 kilometres (25 miles) from the scene of the crime.
    Police found two 500-euro notes, documents in Arabic, and medication near the burnt-out wrecks of the two cars. The thieves also made off with "sensitive" diplomatic documents.
    At the time, police described the attack as "unusual" and stressed that assailants were "obviously well-informed."
    No one was hurt in the attack.
    Airport sources said the prince was Abdul Aziz Bin Fahd, the multi-millionaire youngest son of King Fahd, who died in 2005.
    The prince, who has something of a playboy reputation, was apparently already at Le Bourget when the convoy was attacked. Despite the raid, he took off for an unknown destination. – AFP

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