Police free 2 people after hostage alarm at German bank but find no perpetrators
Police in Germany entered a bank in a small German town Friday and rescued two people from a locked room, hours after officers were called to respond to a hostage situation. Shortly before 3 pm, police said special forces entered the bank and freed two people unhurt from a locked room.
Police in Germany entered a bank in a small German town Friday and rescued two people from a locked room, hours after officers were called to respond to a hostage situation. Regional police said they were alerted to the situation at the Volksbank branch in Sinzig, a town of about 17,000 people in the Rhine valley near Koblenz, at about 9 am local time. They said they believed there were ''several perpetrators and hostages'' in the bank and the driver of an armoured van was a hostage. Shortly before 3 pm, police said special forces entered the bank and freed two people unhurt from a locked room. Police said they found no hostage-takers. They said that the perpetrator or perpetrators appeared to have left immediately after locking the two people into the vault, but it wasn't clear how that happened.
(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
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