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NewsSeptember 21, 2008

Sylvester Bridgeman ADVANCE, Mo. -- Sylvester Bridgeman, 86, of Advance died Saturday, Sept. 20, 2008, at Advance Nursing Center. Bridgeman was born June 13, 1922, in Glennon, Mo., son of Andrew Bridgeman and Anna Hosenfeld. He and Almeda Ladd were married Feb. 3, 1950, in Piggott, Ark...

By SHAWN POGATCHNIK The Associated Press
A pedestrian walks past the Bank of Ireland headquarters on College Green in Dublin, Friday Feb. 27, 2009. According to police, an employee of the Bank of Ireland has stolen millions of euros from the bank, after a gang took his family hostage and threatened to kill them unless he cooperated. Police have refused to confirm the precise sum stolen, but Irish media are putting it at seven million euro (US$ nine million).(AP Photo/Niall Carson-pa) **UNITED KINGDOM OUT: NO SALES: NO ARCHIVE:**
A pedestrian walks past the Bank of Ireland headquarters on College Green in Dublin, Friday Feb. 27, 2009. According to police, an employee of the Bank of Ireland has stolen millions of euros from the bank, after a gang took his family hostage and threatened to kill them unless he cooperated. Police have refused to confirm the precise sum stolen, but Irish media are putting it at seven million euro (US$ nine million).(AP Photo/Niall Carson-pa) **UNITED KINGDOM OUT: NO SALES: NO ARCHIVE:**

DUBLIN — Police recovered millions in stolen cash and interrogated seven suspected robbers Saturday, a day after a gang took a bank employee's family hostage and forced him to rob his own branch.

Police said that shortly before midnight they raided a house in the inner north Dublin district of Phibsborough and stopped a car on a highway ringing Dublin. A third of the stolen money has been recovered.

Sgt. Alan Roughneen said five men and a woman were arrested in Phibsborough, and one man was arrested in the car. Authorities also seized six cars, checking to see if they were used to move hostages or money.

On Friday, six armed, masked men stormed into the rural home of Bank of Ireland worker Shane Travers. They tied up his partner, her 5-year-old son and her mother, and told Travers they would be killed unless he cooperated.

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Such hostage-taking tactics are common in Ireland's criminal underworld — but never in Republic of Ireland history have they netted anything close to the $9 million that Travers carried out from his branch Friday morning.

His family had been abandoned inside a van north of Dublin but escaped on their own and were not seriously harmed.

So-called "tiger kidnappings" — when gangs seize families of bank officials and force them to breach their employers' security — are common crimes in Ireland, a close-knit society where criminals can closely track their targets. But they typically involve thefts under $1.25 million.

Friday's raid on the Bank of Ireland branch in College Green, the tourist heart of Dublin, represented by far the biggest robbery in the history of the Republic of Ireland. But it pales in comparison with a similar 2004 raid in the neighboring British territory of Northern Ireland, when two Northern Bank employees were forced to help a gang take more than 26 million pounds from the bank's central Belfast vault.

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