Gilbert William Galvan Jr. (born c. 1957)[1] is an American bank robber. Having spent many of his adult years in prison, Galvan fled to Canada where he assumed the name Robert Lee Whiteman and began a three-year spree robbing banks and jewelry stores in the 1980s. The media dubbed him the Flying Bandit and the Phantom Bandit.[2] Galvan's exploits were the subject of a 1996 true crime book, The Flying Bandit, written by Robert Knuckle and Ed Arnold, which was adapted into the 2022 film Bandit.

Gilbert Galvan
Born1957 (age 66–67)
Los Angeles, California[1]
Other namesRobert Whiteman; Flying Bandit; Phantom Bandit
Known forMultiple bank robberies across Canada

Criminal career edit

In the United States, Galvan had embezzled from Western Union.[3] In 1984, he escaped from prison in St. Joseph County, Michigan, and fled to Ontario where he took a new name, Robert Lee Whiteman.[1] While living in a mens hostel in Ottawa he met his wife Janice, who was from nearby Pembroke, Ontario. The couple soon moved back to Pembroke to be closer to Janice's family. Around this time Galvan claimed to have found work as a traveling business consultant.[4] He began robbing banks in 1984.[1]

From the Pembroke Airport, Galvan was able to travel to Toronto Pearson International Airport, where he would transfer to Air Canada flights all across the country. With this method, his luggage was transferred to the connecting flight without going through security, permitting him to transport the weapons he would use in his robberies.[5] In some of his jewelry store robberies, Galvan had an accomplice.[6]

Galvan's method was to wear a disguise, carry a weapon (which he never fired during any of the robberies), and pass a note to a teller.[1] Galvan robbed banks in every Canadian province except Prince Edward Island and Newfoundland. His takes ranged from $600 cash in his first robbery to $1.2 million in jewelry. His thefts totaled $251,333 in cash and more than $2 million in jewelry.[1] Galvan was dubbed the Flying Bandit by Canadian media during his crime spree robbing banks and jewelry stores.[7]

When Galvan and an accomplice stole $1.2 million in jewelry in Vancouver, they left behind a gun which police traced to a break-in in Ottawa.[6]

A long-term investigation by police into stolen goods in the Ottawa area came across a man named Robert Whiteman fencing jewelry. Police determined that Whiteman had no social insurance number or birth certificate, but found a trail of credit-card receipts in that name. Comparing credit-card receipts and airline receipts led police to surveil Whiteman's residence in Pembroke where they gathered enough evidence to charge him.[6]

When he was arrested in 1987, Galvan said he had planned to confess to his wife and move with her to the Turks and Caicos Islands.[3]

Galvan pleaded guilty to 59 armed robberies in Canada, plus 17 related charges.[1] In 1988, Galvan was sentenced to 20 years.[2] He was deported from Canada to prison in Wisconsin in 1994 and released in 1998. After his release, he robbed a bank in McHenry, Illinois, in December 2000 and April 2001, for which he was sentenced to 15 years.[8] In December, 2014, Galvan was released from federal custody.[9]

In May, 2015, Galvan was arrested for retail theft in Barrington, Illinois, and was sentenced to 50 days in jail.[2]

In popular culture edit

Robert Knuckle published The Flying Bandit, Bringing Down Canada's Most Daring Armed Robber in 1996.[10]

In 2005, the Canadian true crime series Masterminds (Canadian TV series) featured Galvan's exploits in episode 39.[2]

Galvan's crimes were fictionalized in the 2022 film Bandit, starring Josh Duhamel who met with Galvan during filming. Duhamel said Galvan told him that he had "wanted to create a life and family, and his only option in his mind was to start robbing banks."[7]

Personal life edit

Galvan and his wife, whom he met in Ottawa, were married in Hamilton, Bermuda and had at least two children.[3][a] According to the 2022 film Bandit, they divorced in 1989.

Notes edit

  1. ^ At the time of Galvan's arrest in Canada, his wife was pregnant; however, there is no information about a third child.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Arnold, Ed (March 12, 1988). "Pembroke's Flying Bandit guilty of 59 robberies across Canada". Globe & Mail (Toronto, Canada). Gale A165054279.
  2. ^ a b c d Filas, Lee (June 16, 2015). "Notorious Canadian bank robber known as the 'Phantom Bandit' pleads guilty to Lake County theft". Daily Herald (Arlington Heights, Illinois). p. 4. Gale A418172982.
  3. ^ a b c Arnold, Ed (March 13, 1988). "'Flying bandit' was ready to quit when police finally nabbed him". The Gazette (Montreal, Quebec). p. 9.
  4. ^ Knuckle, Robert; Arnold, Ed (1996). The Flying Bandit. Burnstown, Ont: GeneralStore PublishingHouse. pp. 14–16. ISBN 978-1-896182-60-5.
  5. ^ "Cops reveal how 'bandit' fell". The Province. March 14, 1988. p. 13.
  6. ^ a b c Sibley, Robert; Deveney, Abby (March 15, 1988). "Police can't find stolen cash, jewels". The Ottawa Citizen. p. 33.
  7. ^ a b "Getting into the head of a 'Bandit'". The Spectator (Hamilton, Ontario). October 4, 2022. p. G3. ProQuest 2720804777.
  8. ^ Bargnes, Kevin (May 21, 2015). "Police: Canada's 'Flying Bandit' caught stealing liquor". Chicago Tribune. p. TAB-10.
  9. ^ "Police arrest 'Phantom Bandit'". Lake County Journal. May 21, 2015. p. 3, 13.
  10. ^ Nolan, Daniel (October 21, 2022). "New crime flick 'Bandit' based on book by Dundas writer". The Hamilton Spectator. Retrieved December 15, 2022.