One of the robbers used a ruse of needing a watch battery as the store was about to open, getting a clerk to open the door. The robber, accompanied by an accomplice, brandished a weapon and then forced the employee to put the contents of a safe into two duffel bags, police said.
-- Lance Murray


Seems to me like a safeguard might be requiring two employees to open a safe...one knows one part of the combination and the other knows the other and no one employee has the entire combination. It would have to be two trusted employees and NO ONE else would have a clue how to open it. If opening the safe is required for opening the store, and for closing, then one of those two employees would have to be present. Not convenient, but certainly safer.
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