right? yes, absolutely. the car held one peculiar thing. the cane brian wells twirled inside the bank was there. but it wasn t a simple cane. it was a shotgun that had been fabricated to look like a cane. and it was loaded. clark kept looking. you find the money? find the money. in the bank, wells demanded $250,000 from the teller. the bag found in the car had way less than that. it turned out brian wells lost his life over $8,702. investigators also recovered handwritten notes with detailed, complicated instructions, apparently written for wells, on how to carry out the robbery. the notes involved in this case were voluminous. there were nine total pages of notes. the notes referred to wells as a hostage. and they were peppered with dire warnings. like, bomb has tripwires. forcing or tampering will
$250,000 from the teller. the bag found in the car had way less than that. it turned out brian wells lost his life over $8,702. investigators also recovered handwritten notes with detailed, complicated instructions, apparently written for wells, on how to carry out the robbery. the notes involved in this case were voluminous. there were nine total pages of notes. the notes referred to wells as a hostage. and they were peppered with dire warnings. like, bomb has tripwires. forcing or tampering will detonate. and, we are following you. if you delay, disobey or alert anyone, you will die. the collar bomb locked around wells neck had four keyholes. the notes also included maps and instructions directing wells to a location where he d find a key and more instructions on where to find another key, and then another, until finally he d be free of the bomb. an illustrated manuscript of treachery. i get the sense that there s a