GPS used to locate robbery suspect

SPOKANE – Moments after a Spokane bank was robbed, police found a duffel bag full of cash – and the global positioning satellite device that bank workers had tucked inside it.

The device used satellite signals to relay location of the getaway van to police shortly after the Wednesday robbery.

The driver, Thomas R. Fricks, 38, was ordered held without bond Thursday by U.S. Magistrate Judge Cynthia Imbrognio. A Monday detention hearing was scheduled on a federal bank robbery charge.

“You guys are good!” Fricks said as Spokane police officer Tim Moses arrested him shortly after the Washington Trust Bank branch robbery, according to documents filed in federal court.

Fricks told FBI agents he robbed the bank because “of his inability to keep a steady job and his need to provide for his family,” according to court documents.

During the robbery, a masked armed man herded three employees into the bank vault and threatened to kill their families if they didn’t cooperate, the documents say.

A teller who was on the phone with her husband told him the bank was being robbed and to call police.

The masked robber threw a black duffel bag to another bank employee and said he wanted $40,000 “and no bait bills,” according to the court documents.

The employee complied, stuffing in more than $37,920 in cash – and the GPS device.

“The electronic tracking device, which had been included with the money, did function,” allowing police to track the location of the fleeing getaway vehicle, the documents said.

Police recovered a black duffel bag containing a loaded BB gun and the missing cash from the minivan Fricks was driving.

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