Skip to content
News
Link copied to clipboard

‘Mummy Bandit’ unraveled in Phila. suburbs

The "Mummy Bandit" at the Sovereign Bank in Wyndmoor. (FBI)
The "Mummy Bandit" at the Sovereign Bank in Wyndmoor. (FBI)Read more

The case of the "Mummy Bandit" may be all wrapped up.

Police on Wednesday arrested a Mount Airy man believed to the serial bank robber who disguised himself using gauze bandages on his face and hand.

The arrest unraveled about 2:45 p.m. Wednesday in Havertown. Haverford Township police had staked out an Alliance Bank branch after a teller on Tuesday recognized a man who knocked on the glass doors after closing. She had seen his face on a wanted flier, said Dep. Chief John Viola.

On Wednesday, a patrol officer spotted a gray sedan that matched the description of the getaway car used in five bank jobs in Philadelphia and the Pennsylvania suburbs, said Dep. Chief John Viola.

The car parked in a nearby development behind the Havertown post office. When the man got out of the car he carried a distinctive yellow bag. His hand was bandaged and his hat was pulled low. A woman got out of the car also, leaving three small children in the backseat, Viola said.

Officers quickly surrounded the couple and ordered them to the ground.

"He never made it to the bank," Viola said.

Detectives questioned Hiram Adams, 44, at headquarters.

"I'm told he's confessed to many of the bank robberies," Viola said. "It could be as high as seven."

The FBI was expected to charge Adams Wednesday night.

Charges against Adams' girlfriend, who was not named by police, are pending. Her children - ages 2, 4, and 6 - were placed with her family.

FBI spokesman J.J. Klaver said the "Mummy Bandit" was responsible for at least five robberies during the last year, the most recent a Sovereign Bank branch in Wyndmoor held up on June 4. He also struck three branches in Philadelphia and another in Wyncote.

Though he never displayed a weapon, "he has threatened that he has a bomb or is carrying a gun," Klaver said.

In each robbery, the bandit carried a yellow bag and made attempts to disguise himself, usually applying bandages to his face. During one robbery, he dressed as a doctor, with a stethoscope over hanging from his neck and a hair net over his head.

Viola was not sure why the bandit bothered to bandage parts of his face and body.

"The pictures were out there and the bank personnel recognized him right away," Viola said. "He did a poor job of covering himself up.