What could have been the perfect crime was undone when the identity of
the alleged robbers was unmasked by a grateful note thanking a company
for the disguise.
Police arrested Edward Byam, 24, and Akeem Monsalvatge,
37, on Monday and charged them with wearing realistic Hollywood-style
masks and dressed as New York City detectives to knock over a
Pay-O-Matic check cashing facility on Valentine's Day in Queens, N.Y.
For months cops thought they were looking for two white suspects, when the investigation received an important tip.
One suspect bore a striking similarity to "Mac the Guy," a silicon mask
manufactured by movie-makeup company CFX Composite Effects.
When investigators contacted the company, they were told Byam had recently emailed the firm in thanks for the mask.
"I'm sending this message to say I'm extremely pleased by CFX work on
the mask," Byam allegedly wrote the company, as first reported by the
New York Post and confirmed by the NYPD and the company. "The realism of
the mask is unbelievable."
Byam and Monsalvatge are black.
According to the company's website "Mac is designed for ultimate human
realism." The company sells the silicon mask starting at $569, but it
can be customized with fake hair, including the goatee the thieves
allegedly used.
Byam had made another critical blunder, police said.
Cops traced the photo of the clerk's home, which was left at the scene
of the crime, to a Walgreen's pharmacy where the print was made. The
store was able to link a receipt for the prints to Byam's phone number,
cops confirmed.
The two men were charged Wednesday with robbery and impersonating an
officer and were ordered held without bond. It was unclear whether they
had obtained attorneys.
Criminals have increasingly turned to realistic masks in committing crimes.
In 2010, Canadian officials called the use of a mask an "unbelievable case of concealment" when a young Asian man tried entering the country illegally disguised as an elderly white man.
No comments:
Post a Comment