O'Grady-Brown

Memorial Scholarship Fund

About the Brinks Armored Car Robbery

October 20th, 1981

On October 20, 1981 heavily armed terrorists staged a daylight assault on a Brinks armored car at the Nanuet Mall in Nanuet, New York. In the attack that followed, Brinks Guard Peter Paige was killed and Joseph Trombino seriously wounded, nearly losing his arm to the gunman’s bullets. Another Brinks guard, James Kelly, suffered wounds and a concussion as the gunmen pumped automatic weapon fire into the armored vehicle.


After leaving the mall the gunmen fled east, ditching their getaway car and entering the rear of a waiting U-Haul truck being driven by co-conspirators. This was an attempt to escape detection, thinking they would easily escape back to New York City in the confusion immediately following the robbery.


Unfortunately for them, someone witnessed the switch from the original getaway car to the U-Haul, who then notified the local police and an alert was broadcast to officers on patrol.


Ten minutes later Nyack Police officers were conducting a roadblock at Exit 11 of the New York State Thruway. Spotting a U-Haul, they ordered it to the side of the road. The driver and passenger in the front of the U-Haul did not match the description of the gunmen at the mall. Further, police radio transmissions had broadcast reports of another U-Haul being spotted heading south into New Jersey on Rt. 304.


Kathy Boudin, an occupant of the U-Haul, complained to the police that their guns made her nervous. Apparently, thinking they had the wrong U-Haul, the police stowed their weapons and shotgun. At that moment the rear of the U-Haul flew open and half a dozen heavily armed killers jumped out, each with military-style fully automatic weapons. Police Officer Waverly Brown was hit immediately and died at the scene. Detective Arthur Keenan was struck before he was able to take cover and return fire. Sergeant Edward O’Grady was shot numerous times and died ninety minutes later at Nyack Hospital. Police Officer Brian Lennon exchanged shots but was seriously outnumbered and under heavy fire.


At the time, Nyack Police carried six shot standard issue revolvers that were no match for the firepower of the heavily armed terrorists. Tests later conducted by law enforcement found that the killer’s guns were capable of shooting over 100 bullets per minute. O’Grady and Brown were the first Rockland County police officers shot to death in modern times.


In the confusion afterwards the killers fled in all directions. The Nyack community was overcome with a feeling of grief as it prepared to bury two of its own. Many of the killers were caught that day, some in the days, weeks and months to follow. Kathy Boudin was captured by an off-duty New York City corrections officer, Mike Koch, who witnessed the shootout and her attempted escape as she had fled the scene running near the New York State Thruway.


South Nyack - Grand View Police Chief Alan Colsey caught three other accomplices after a harrowing chase. Colsey pursued two escaping vehicles operated by the terrorists along Christian Herald Road and Midland Avenue until one of the vehicles crashed into a brick wall at Sixth Avenue and Broadway. Reports indicate that the occupants attempted to fire their weapons at the Chief, but they could not locate their ammunition in the aftermath of the violent crash. The other vehicle, containing Marilyn Jean Buck, Mutulu Shakur and others, made good their escape that day, but the bulk of the stolen Brinks money was recovered in the vehicle at Sixth Avenue.


Most of the terrorists were sentenced to prison on a variety of state and federal charges, never to see the light of day again. Unfortunately however, many of the defendants have since been released.

Sergeant Edward J. O'Grady

Nyack Police Department

Sgt. Edward O'Grady was a native of Nyack and a graduate of Nyack High School before enlisting in the United States Marine Corps. After serving two tours of duty in Vietnam, O'Grady returned to civilian life and was hired as a police officer by the Village of Nyack. In 1976, O'Grady was promoted to Sergeant, the youngest person in the history of Rockland County to achieve that rank. O'Grady was a long time member of the Jackson Hose Company No.3, a unit of the Nyack Volunteer Fire Department, as was his father before him. At the time of his death, Sgt. O’Grady left behind his wife Diane and three children, a son Edward, Jr., age six, and two daughters Patricia, age two and Kimberly, age 6 months.


Police Officer Waverly Brown

Nyack Police Department

Officer Waverly Brown was a happy-go-lucky generous man who was nicknamed "Chipper". According to a fellow officer "he had absolutely no enemies". He kept a garden and enjoyed cooking. Before reporting to work each day Waverly would stop off at a local grocery store, known as the Grand Union, to buy groceries. The police station had a kitchen and Waverly would prepare meals for the other cops on his shift. He had a seventeen year-old son and two grown daughters who were serving, as he did, in the United States Air Force. He had a girlfriend in Nyack (Waverly was separated from his wife). His mother, Dorothy DeLoatch, lived in Lawrenceville, Virginia, a small town where she was born sixty-seven years before the robbery. She had returned there after spending thirty years in Nyack, working at Rockland State Hospital and raising three children. Dorothy had a small vegetable garden in which she grew corn, peas, lettuce and squash. Waverly liked to help out with the garden whenever he visited her. He was well liked in the Town of Lawrenceville, VA and was once asked to join the local police force there, but he loved his job in Nyack, where he had the reputation of being a good street cop. Waverly's son Gregory carried on his father's tradition by becoming a police officer with the United States Postal Police.


Guard Peter Paige

Brinks Corporation

Peter Paige was the youngest of seven brothers and sisters. He was a hard-working, soft spoken man. Born and raised in New Jersey and a veteran of the United States Navy, Peter Paige began his employment with the Brinks Corporation as a guard in 1956. Never a stranger to hard work, he served Brink's loyally for 25 years until his untimely death in 1981. He was a selfless man who always placed the needs of others before his own. At the time of his death at age 49, Paige left behind a wife Josephine, a daughter Susan, (19) and two sons Michael (16) and Peter (9). He was also survived by six brothers and sisters. Although they never had the honor of meeting him, Peter Paige now also has a son-in-law, Gary, two daughter-in-laws, Heidi and Tricia and three grandchildren, Christopher, Patrick and Erica.