Teller-turned-robber recalls 1958 bank heist - Action News
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Ottawa

Teller-turned-robber recalls 1958 bank heist

Boyne Johnston was a 25-year-old bank teller in downtown Ottawa when, one day in 1958, he walked out the door with $260,000. This is his story.

Boyne Johnston, now 85, stole $260,000 and went on a spending spree before he got caught

Boyne Johnston enjoys a beer at his favourite pub in Renfrew, Ont., on Aug. 17, 2018. Sixty years ago, the then 25-year-old bank teller walked out of the former Imperial Bank of Canada branch in downtown Ottawa with $260,000 and spent 17 days on the lam. (Stu Mills/CBC)

Boyne Johnston sipsfrom abottle of beer athis favourite Renfrew, Ont., pub, as he prepares to tell the 60-year-oldstory one more time.

Even at 85, the names, dates and addresses ofhis flight from justicestill come readily to his lips.

"It's embedded in stone, in my brain," he concedes.

"I guess I'd have to start [with] when I joined the bank."

'I would do it all over again for one experience:' bank robber recalls 1958 heist

6 years ago
Duration 0:42
Boyne Johnston was a 25-year-old bank teller in downtown Ottawa when, one day in 1958, he walked out the door with $260,000.

Six decades ago, Johnston was working as a teller at the Imperial Bank of Canada branch on Sparks Street in downtown Ottawa.

One day, hewalked off the job with roughly $260,000 more than two million dollars in today's money from the vault.

He spent 17 days on the lam andliving the high lifebefore being captured in a Colorado night club.

His story recently made headlines when he returned to the former bank, now a swanky restaurant called Riviera, for lunch.Staff shared a photo on Instagram of Johnstonwearinga dapper suit and enjoyinga glass of champagne.

An Instagram post made by Ottawa restaurant Riviera after former bank robber Boyne Johnston paid a visit on Aug. 10, 2018. Johnston worked as a teller at the former Imperial Bank of Canada branch where Riviera now stands. (Riviera)

Johnston had started working at the bank branch when he was18, but quit when he felt he wasn'tbeing promoted quickly enough.

After a stint working in a mine in northwestern Ontario for his father's drilling company, he returned to Renfrew, where he was rehired by the bank, eventually landing a position working as the head tellerat the Sparks Street branch.

Johnston handled all of the branch's monthly ledgers, and was responsible forsending the bank's balance sheetsandhundreds of public servants' wage receipts between the Bank of Canada and his bank's head office.

He was good with numbers but he was also good atdrinking and spending money.

Lavish tastes

His favourite clubs were across the Ottawa River in Hull, where he'd spend lavishly, ordering bottles of champagne and enjoying the company of local women. He often had a table inthe Rose Room of the long-gone ChaudireClub.

"It was the classiest," Johnston reflected. "Saw Louis Armstrong there. Ella Fitzgerald [too]."

Johnston also bought aBritish sports car, and droppedabout $1,000 on furniture for the BruyreStreet apartment heshared with his new wife even though the bank had only approved a loan of about $100.

Only in this branchcould I have gotten away with what I did.- Boyne Johnston

His spending caught up to him in 1957, however, when he ended up unable to pay his rent.

He covered the shortfall with money from the bank, and while he replaced it on payday, the incident opened theyoung man'seyes to just how easy stealing from his employer could be.

"Only in this branch," Johnston said, "could I have gotten away with what I did."

Mistakes made by other Imperial branches were sent to Johnston's branch as "coupons" to be reconciled, Johnston said.

He would alter the correction notices himself, sometimes by adding a zero to the sum sometimes by adding more. He then pocketed the difference.

But by the time he'd embezzled $1,000 the equivalent of $10,000 in 2018 dollars he knew he wouldn't ever be able to pay it back.

Boyne Johnston robbed the Imperial Bank of Canada on Sparks Street where the popular Riviera restaurant now sits when he worked there as a bank teller in the late 1950s. According to a local historian, this wanted poster was published in the Ottawa Citizen in 1958.

Still, he kept up the scheme, bringing insomewhere around $25,000and concealing the evidence of his embezzlementby preventing others from handling the coupons.

Then, in September 1958, his bank manager told himhe was being promoted to head accountant.

"I'm dead. Next guy moves in [to my job], he's going to find [all the evidence], there's no argument about it," Johnston recalled thinking."What am I going to do?"

On the run

Johnston said he contemplated escaping to some place like South America, but he couldn't see himself a kid from small-town eastern Ontario being on the runforever.

So, he said,he decided he would treat himself to a big, lavish holiday.

One Friday, heemptied the vault reserves into two canvas bags,stashing them in a little-used storage closet while no one was watching.

I had no intention of staying away forever.- Johnston

He then made a big show of having to dash off to Renfrewfor the weekend,hastily closing the vault and spinning the lock before the required count of the bank's money could be made.

Johnston returned later that evening,loaded the cash into the trunk of his yellow 1956 Mercury Monarch Phaeton and made arrangementsto fly to Los Angeles.

"I had no intention of staying away forever. I'm from Renfrew. I'd just take a holiday, have a good time," he said.

For the next 17 days, Johnston lived the life of aplayboy.

He played it hour by hour, never thinking too far ahead. He abandoned his plans to continue from Los Angeles to Hawaii out of fears there might be a customs check how would he explain a pigskin suitcase bulging with $260,000? and instead ended up in Twin Falls, Idaho.

There, Johnston began spending the money in earnest, buying a Zenith transoceanic radio for $150 and a sapphire ring. He later purchased a 1959 Corvette and began touring around the western U.S.,"seeing the sights."

But the good times didn't lastlong.

He said, 'Well, you better get the hell off the phone because my line's tapped.' And it was.- Johnston

Eventually, Johnstongot a call from a good friend and former roommate in Canada who urged him to give himself up.

The friend saideveryone back home was worried about him. Johnston gave his friend a word: he'd head south to go deep-sea fishing, but would be back in Ontario by Christmas.

"He said, 'Well, you better get the hell off the phone because my line's tapped,'" Johnston recalled. "And it was. I'd asked the detectives that picked me up later."

Johnston made his way to Denver, where he checked into a room at the YMCA. He turned on his radio, and the news reported that he'd been spotted in Wyoming and that there was a $10,000 reward for his capture.

This was the front page of the Ottawa Journal on Dec. 18, 1958, the date Boyne Johnston of Renfrew, Ont., was sentenced to four years in prison for stealing $260,000 from the Ottawa bank he worked at. (Ottawa Journal/Newspapers.com)

He drank a six-pack of beer in his roomand then headed to a local nightclub.

Johnston took a seat at the bar andbought a few bottles of champagne to enjoy with a pair of "bar girls," hesaid. Two gentlemen pulled up about three stools down.

When he went to the washroom, theyfollowed.

"They cuff me right in the place. We're walking out, the two girls with their champagne [shout] 'Where you going?"

"I say, 'To jail!'"

'I'd do it all over again'

Johnston would end up spending four years in prison in the former Kingston Penitentiary for his crime. His father paid back $20,000 of the illicitly-spent money. His wife, he said, "wasn't tookeen on taking me back" but she did.

After he got out, Johnston turned down offers to write a book about his exploits. Despite his theft, he said hewas able to wrangle a job as an accountant.

Johnston vows he's never stolen anything since.He also sayshehas no regrets about the whole experience but perhaps not for the reason most people would think.

"I'd do it all over again, but only for one reason," Johnston said.

"Nobody understands until your freedom is taken awaywhat your freedom is. I have such great appreciation for life today."

With files from Trevor Pritchard

Boyne Johnston says the four years he spent in prison for the bank heist has given him a greater appreciation of what it means to be a free man. (Stu Mills/CBC)