Two hapless criminals picked the wrong place when they held up a McDonald's in France.
Eleven armed members of an elite paramilitary force happened to be eating inside.
The
pair allegedly burst into the Ecole-Valentin branch of the fast-food
restaurant in the eastern French city of Besancon on Sunday. They fired a
shotgun at the ceiling, yelling at the customers inside to get on the
floor, the city's prosecutor Edwige Roux-Morizot told CNN.
One of the robbers then stole about 2000 euros ($2,269) from the registers before the men ran away, she said.
Unfortunately
for them, among the 40-odd customers grabbing burgers at the time were
11 members of the GIGN (National Gendarmerie Intervention Group), an
elite special operations unit of the national gendarme which specializes
in counter-terror and hostage situations.
Nine of them, who were wearing plain clothes but carrying weapons, chased the robbers, said Roux-Morizot.
They caught one when he stumbled on stairs.
But
the other robber, armed with the shotgun, kept running. At one point he
took aim at the crack special forces officers, said the prosecutor.
Big mistake.
The
GIGN officers yelled at him to stop and fired warning shots to deter
him, she said.
But when he took aim again, they responded with a
"neutralization shot" to his abdomen.
The
suspects -- both of whom were born in 1991 and were known to police --
were then taken to hospital and charged with armed robbery, Roux-Morizot
said.
She said the officers had
delayed intervening earlier in the robbery because of the threat posed
to the customers. None of the staff or customers were injured in the
robbery.
No doubt the robbers are ruing their trip to the Golden Arches that day. But, as they say, we're lovin' it.