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The Honolulu Advertiser
Updated at 6:40 p.m., Wednesday, April 16, 2008

Police task force investigating surge in ATM thefts

By Rod Ohira
Advertiser Staff Writer

Honolulu police have organized a task force to investigate the recent surge in quick-hit thefts from stand-alone automated teller machines.

Since April 3, thieves have broken into seven ATM machines and stolen cash from four of them, according to police. The targeted ATMs belong either to a federal credit union or two private companies; none are connected to Hawai'i's major banks, police said.

Investigators believe two separate groups are responsible of the break-ins, which are often completed in less than 10 minutes. Thieves are using crowbars to pry open the machines and none of the targeted ATMs had overhead surveillance equipment.

Major Carlton Nishimura, commander of HPD's Criminal Investigation Division, confirmed today a task force made up of personnel from two different district crime reduction units and the department's investigative bureau has been assigned to investigate the ATM thefts. The task force is part of the division's new Strategic Enforcement Detail, said Nishimura.

The latest ATM break-in occurred Monday night in Moi'ili'ili, according to Nishimura.

The Advertiser reported on April 3 that police were investigating a quick-hit series of four ATM break-ins in Central O'ahu which included a takeover robbery of Aiea Cue at 98-064 Kamehameha Hwy. in Waimalu.

The series started on April 1 at Aiea Shopping Plaza on Kauhale Road.

At about midnight April 2, thieves broke into another ATM near Big City Diner at Gentry Waipio Shopping Center.

At 2:15 a.m. April 3, three men with crowbars barged into the second-floor Aiea Cue pool hall, ordered four employees to lay face down, and used a "blow torch" to break into an ATM and change machine. The robbery was completed in 15-20 minutes and the suspects fled with $1,000 in coins and $175 cash taken from the cash register, an undisclosed amount from the ATM and change machine, a laptop computer, a PlayStation unit, an iPod and video games.

Ju Young Woo, 33, was charged April 9 with first-degree robbery in connection with the Aiea Cue holdup. He is being held at the O'ahu Community Correction Center in lieu of $750,000 bail. The other suspects, who wore masks, are still at large.

The April 3 spree continued as thieves broke into a second-floor ATM at Pearl City Business Plaza, 803 Kamehameha Hwy., at about 4:15 a.m. The entry door to the second floor and ATM were pried open. About $20,000 was reportedly stolen in the Pearl City case but far lesser amounts in the other break-ins.

Except for the Aiea Cue case, the other ATM break-ins were being investigated as thefts within the police districts they occurred until the formation of the task force.

Police responding to anonymous 911 calls reporting the ATM break-ins believe they have encountered suspects still at the scene but have not been able to arrest anyone without surveillance tapes or eyewitnesses.

Reach Rod Ohira at rohira@honoluluadvertiser.com.