G4S security guard, 36, admits stealing £1million from his abandoned van – but £910k remains missing
Joel March was found with new clothes, trainers and £60k cash - but the rest of the money's disappeared

Joel March was found with new clothes, trainers and £60k cash - but the rest of the money's disappeared
A SECURITY guard today admitted stealing almost £1million from his G4S van - as cops desperately try to recover the £910,000 still missing.
Cops found Joel March, 36, with £60,000 as well as new clothes and trainers after he fled with the cash deposit boxes on Tuesday morning.
The dad-of-three left his armoured vehicle on a double-yellow line in Clapham at 9am — but the firm were only alerted more than eight hours later.
Scotland Yard's elite Flying Squad unit launched an investigation and March was arrested in nearby Brixton yesterday afternoon.
The 36-year-old today pleaded guilty to stealing £970,000 when he appeared at Camberwell Green Magistrates Court - but police remain in the dark about where most of the missing money has vanished.
March parked the armoured blue van at 8.58am on Tuesday in a quiet road in Clapham, South West London.
One resident said he immediately thought it was suspicious “because there are no shops here”.
He said he called G4S at around 5.30pm but “they didn’t seem particularly concerned”.
It was not until 7pm the Met Police was alerted “to reports of a theft of cash deposit boxes”.
Amanda McCabe, prosecuting, told the court: "G4S did not record a report concerning the van until some ten hours after it had been abandoned and it was found money that should have been loaded into various lockers hadn’t been.
“It was found there was his body armour, phone and other items left in the van.
“Inquiries were made to locate the defendant, he was eventually followed to an address in Brixton, [where] police seized approximately £60,000 in cash and found some new clothing and footwear.
“The defendant was interviewed and gave account in which he complained about G4S as employers and complained about his mental health.
“There are potential others involved in this case and inquiries are ongoing.”
Concerned residents on Larkhall Rise in Clapham contacted cops to tell them there was an armoured G4S van which had been parked outside all day - with a parking ticket on the dashboard.
One reported seeing March’s ID card on the front passenger seat and a note which said he was allowed to park on the double yellow lines as he was making deliveries.
March’s mum, Rowena Watson, 64, who lives with him just a short walk from where he abandoned the van told The Sun he had worked for G4S for “a few years” and had been “a bit stressed” before the robbery - but would not elaborate why.
She added: "As far as I know he never had any money issues."
G4S is the biggest security company in the UK for handling, transporting and processing cash.
But ex-Met chief superintendent Barry Phillips said: “Something has gone seriously wrong. The van’s movements should have been monitored and the controllers should have been in regular communication with the guard.”
He also found it “bewildering” the parking warden did not call the police after ticketing the van at around 5pm.
Neighbours said it was finally towed away at 3.30am yesterday after being forensically examined.
G4S said: “These incidents are extremely rare in our UK Cash business and we are working closely with the Metropolitan Police to resolve the matter.”
Bruce Reid, defending, said March did not apply for bail ahead of sentencing.
Magistrate, Karim Ezzat, told March he would be sentenced within a month, he said: “You indicated a guilty plea and its right you should be sentenced at a crown court, that will be done approximately in three weeks time."
By Danny De Vaal
SECURITY guards fleeing with vast amounts of cash have been the target of previous manhunts.
One, “Fast” Eddie Maher, left, went on the run for 19 years after stealing £1.2million from his Securicor van.
He unloaded 30 bags of money as a colleague was inside a Lloyds Bank in Felixstowe, Suffolk, in 1993. Maher, an ex-soldier and fireman, sped off in a stolen Toyota before switching to an Opel Ascona. It was later found abandoned and burned out.
The dad of three flew to the US where he set up home in a small Colorado town. But he was eventually betrayed by his son and daughter-in-law. He was extradited in 2012 and jailed for five years.
Another guard, “Florida” Phil Wells, stole nearly £1million in a robbery at Heathrow Airport.
Wells, working for a West London firm, collected £928,000 in foreign currency from a Portuguese aircraft in 1989.
But instead of delivering it as planned, he fled, sparking an international manhunt. Cops believed he was in Florida but he was actually hiding out in Essex.
He later moved to Malta then married a Russian teenage gymnast named Olga in Uzbekistan. She believed he was a wealthy greengrocer from Essex.
Wells ran out of money after four years before returning to Britain where he tried to flog his story to The Sun for £25,000.
However cops were tipped off and he was arrested in East London. He was later jailed for six years in 1994.
We pay for your stories! Do you have a story for The Sun Online news team? Email us at [email protected] or call 0207 782 4368 . You can WhatsApp us on 07810 791 502. We pay for videos too. Click here to upload yours.