Maybe the stupidest criminals of all time! Phaedrus will love this one!

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Buried Treasure Trouble

LAWRENCE, Mass., April 29, 2005
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<TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0><TBODY><TR><TD>'Treasure Finders' Arrested</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
<TABLE height=131 cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width=175 border=0><TBODY><TR><TD background=http://wwwimage.cbsnews.com/images/2005/04/29/image691951l.jpg> </TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>Tim Crebase holds a sample of some of the vintage bills he and friend Barry Villcliff, right, say they found at the house of Kevin Kozak, left, in New York. (Photo: AP)

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"Sometimes wanting to be famous is really the downfall of people."
[size=-2]Police Chief Joseph E. Solomon

<TABLE height=131 cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width=175 border=0><TBODY><TR><TD background=http://wwwimage.cbsnews.com/images/2005/04/29/image691950l.jpg> </TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>In this undated photo released by coin dealer Domenic Magnano, the stash of U.S. currency supposedly found by Tim Crebase is displayed. (Photo: AP)

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(CBS/AP) A group of men who made national headlines by claiming they found a buried treasure worth up to $125,000 was charged Friday with stealing the collection of old currency from a barn where they were working.

The pair of men seemed to be overnight celebrities. CBS News Correspondent Sharyn Alfonsi reports that the pair had a story that made the media salivate. So they took their show on the road, appearing on television shows and in countless news headlines.

But when their unbelievable story became inconsistent, it drew police attention.

Barry Billcliff, 27, and Timothy Crebase, 22, were charged with receiving stolen property, conspiracy and accessory after the fact, Methuen Police Lt. Kevin Martin said.

The two were arraigned Friday in Lawrence District Court. Bail was set at $5,000 for Billcliff and $1,000 for Crebase.

Warrants also were issued Friday for Kevin Kozak, 27, and Matt Ingham, 23, on the same charges. It was unclear whether they were in custody.

Police said Crebase confessed to finding the money in the gutter of a barn they were hired to repair in Newbury. Authorities declined to identify the owners of the barn nor would they comment on whether the money had been reported missing.

But lawyers for Billcliff and Crebase said the men insisted they found the box under a tree in the back yard of a house Crebase rented from Kozak.

"There is no evidence, none, that my client committed any crime." said Alexander Kain, who is representing Billcliff.

The men had made several appearances on national television this week, and police noticed details of the story changed with each appearance.

Police Chief Joseph E. Solomon told ABC's "Good Morning America" that authorities might never have suspected anything had the men not sought publicity.

"Had they just put the money away or, you know, gone somewhere outside of the area and sold a little money at a time, I don't think anybody would have known or suspected anything," Solomon said. "Sometimes wanting to be famous is really the downfall of people."

Investigators said Crebase, Billcliff and Ingham found the money stuffed in rusting tin cans in the barn's gutter and persuaded Kozak to go along with their story. The men claimed they found 1,800 bank notes and bills dating between 1899 and 1928 while digging in the yard of the house Crebase rents.

The materials had a face value of about $7,000, but prosecutor Gabrielle Clark said the men had been offered $125,000 by a collector.

The men's stories, though, attracted suspicion because of discrepancies. The depth of the buried crate, for example, ranged from 9 inches to 2 feet.

The men also gave conflicting reasons for digging in Crebase's yard. They told one reporter they were preparing to plant a tree. In other reports, they said they were trying to remove a small tree or dig up the roots of a shrub that was damaging the home's foundation.

Billcliff insisted the discrepancies in the story of how the money happened found could be explained.

"It's like watching a car accident," he told the newspaper. "Sometimes someone will say something and someone else will say something slightly different, but mostly it's the same."

Christine Tetlow, who identified herself as a longtime friend of Billcliff, defended him and said the pair did not steal the money.

"If you need money, he'll be the first person to step up and give it to you and never ask to get it back," she said.




©MMV, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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Couple of brain surgeons. Anderson Cooper just did a piece on his CNN show about these two geniuses. Silence is Golden.


wil.
 

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i read about them in the paper yesterday (and then today)......brilliant!
 

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That's good...but as far as the title of the dumbest criminal, I have to go with a story I came across a while ago about a criminal who tried to rob a gun store (yes, a gun store!) and was shot dead by both a police officer and the store's owner. To make it even better, he had to step AROUND the marked police car that was parked outside just to get inside the store!
 

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These guys are classics, up there with that multi-million dollar Wells Fargo heist from a few years ago. One of the idiots from that incident bought a Ferrari, then told his neighbours that he used to be a pro athlete and it was his one leftover indulgence. The only thing is, he was still in his hometown and his neighbours had known him since he was ten years old ... so basically he was saying that that time he went away for Labour Day weekend he was pitching for the Mets and they paid him $ 3 million for that one game (or insert alternate dipshît scenario of your choosing.)

Pretty amazing stuff. I would never lie and say that there is no amount of money that wouldn't tempt me into committing a crime, but I can say for sure that if I did, I for sure would not be a retard about the funds disbursement (word to potential partners: I will probably kill you after the fact just to tie up loose ends. Peace :D )


Phaedrus
 

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Phaedrus, remind me to never rob a bank with you :shoota:
 

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