The suspect entered the bank at approximately 11 a.m., handed a bank teller a note stating that he had a bomb and demanded cash, Sgt. Ray Harley said. No weapon was visible.
“He got some money and walked out of the bank,” Harley said.
Neither bank employees nor motorists in the parking lot saw which direction he headed, Harley said. Sheriff’s patrol cars and a helicopter blanketed the area immediately following the incident, but were working without a vehicle description, Harley said.
The bank remained closed for several hours on Monday, and employees emerged at least once to turn away waiting customers.
Michael Stremfel, owner of an adjacent business, Flintridge Pharmacy & Medical Supply, said he didn’t realize anything was wrong until he saw the sheriff’s cars and heard the helicopter overhead.
“I am over there every day,” Stremfel said of the Bank of America. “I know all of those people. So I just went over there and confirmed that the door was locked.”
The most recent La Cañada bank robbery took place on Oct. 22 two masked men entered Chase bank in the 700 block of Foothill Boulevard and wielded guns before escaping with an undisclosed amount of cash. On Oct. 19, a man robbed a La Crescenta branch of Citibank, in the 2600 block of Foothill Boulevard, and made off with $5,000.