The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Ram-raid thieves used stolen car

Keys taken as owner sleeps then BMW driven into Broughty Ferry store

- STEFAN MORKIS

Thieves broke into a Carnoustie house and stole a car while its owner slept before using the luxury vehicle to ram-raid a Broughty Ferry supermarke­t.

The Co-Op in Panmurefie­ld Village was attacked in the early hours of yesterday. The raiders ignored CCTV cameras and made off with a quantity of cigarettes and alcohol.

It later emerged the car used in the robbery had been stolen from a quiet street in Carnoustie. The thieves stole the keys to the £15,000 BMW while owner Nicola Cameron and her two young daughters slept upstairs. Her husband Ross is believed to have been awake when the thief sneaked into his family’s home but was wearing headphones and did not hear the intruder.

Ram-raiders used a stolen car to break into a supermarke­t on the outskirts of Dundee in the early hours of yesterday.

The incident happened at the Co-op on Lawers Drive, in Panmurefie­ld, between 4am and 4.30am.

A car stolen from the driveway of a house in a quiet residentia­l street in Carnoustie hours earlier had been used in the raid.

It is believed the vehicle was reversed over the pavement and through the automatic door of the shop.

The bottom section of the door was lifted up by the impact, leaving the door hanging from the top of the door-frame.

It had been propped up on a tower of shopping baskets although it is unclear whether this happened as a result of the collision or if it was done by the raiders to give them easier access to the premises.

They made off with a quantity of cigarettes while a vodka bottle was dropped outside the store, presumably by the fleeing thieves.

The entire incident, which lasted only a few minutes, was captured on the store’s CCTV system.

The break-in was only discovered when staff arrived for work around 5am.

Despite the Co-op’s alarm sounding, guests at the Premier Inn hotel on the other side of the road said they had not heard anything out of the ordinary.

Detective Sergeant Sarah Brow from Police Scotland’s Tayside Division said: “I am appealing for anyone who may have been in the area at the time to come forward and assist our inquiries.

“We are keen to speak to anyone who may have seen the BMW between Carnoustie and Lawers Drive in the early hours of this morning or anyone who knows where the car is now.

“Anyone with informatio­n should contact Tayside Division on 101 quoting 0391/04 or speak to any police officer.

“Officers are carrying out a review of CCTV and door to door enquiries.

“Alternativ­ely, informatio­n can be passed anonymousl­y via the charity Crimestopp­ers on 0800 555 111.”

A Co-op spokeswoma­n said: “We can confirm that there was a robbery at our Panmurefie­ld store at around 4.30 am on Thursday May 4.

“We apologise for the inconvenie­nce caused by its temporary closure and

I’ve just come up myself and you can see that the door is an absolute mess and some bottles of alcohol have been smashed. CAROL MORGAN

appeal for anyone with informatio­n to come forward to the police.”

The store was able to re-open late yesterday afternoon after repairs had been carried out to the damaged door.

The nearest houses to the Co-op are on Wyvis Avenue, which lies directly behind the Co-op.

But few residents were aware of the break-in although one woman, who asked not to be named, said she had been woken by the incident.

She said: “I heard the alarm go off but I was annoyed more than anything – the alarms go off all the time, either there or at The Bell Tree.

“I had a look out towards The Bell Tree but didn’t see anything untoward so didn’t call the police.”

The Co-op’s regular customers were shocked by the incident.

Carol Morgan, 48, said: “I sent my young lass up for milk this morning and she said the store was closed due to a break-in.

“I’ve just come up myself and you can see that the door is an absolute mess and some bottles of alcohol have been smashed.”

 ?? Picture: Kris Miller. ?? The automatic door of the shop was forced open and left hanging by the raiders.
Picture: Kris Miller. The automatic door of the shop was forced open and left hanging by the raiders.
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 ?? Pictures: Kris Miller. ?? A forensics officer examines the scene of the raid in Panmurefie­ld; the damage to the door of the Co-op store, top right; and Nicola Cameron, above right,whose BMW was stolen from outside her home in Carnoustie and used in the robbery.
Pictures: Kris Miller. A forensics officer examines the scene of the raid in Panmurefie­ld; the damage to the door of the Co-op store, top right; and Nicola Cameron, above right,whose BMW was stolen from outside her home in Carnoustie and used in the robbery.
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