This invention relates to a tamper-evident enclosure for the storage and transport of bank notes.
Typically, at a point of sale such as a cashier's desk in a supermarket, a container is suspended beneath the desk for the intermittent reception of wads of bank notes. It may be used to store notes as they are taken from customers, but more usually it acts as an “overflow” for the till on top of the desk. When the pile of notes of a particular denomination in the till reaches a given level it is transferred to the container, which offers better security than the till. Periodically the loaded containers are taken by security personnel to a bank, or more usually they are taken by the staff to a central counting room, where the money is counted and bagged for transport to the bank.
Containers currently in use are rigid boxes which slide into and out of guides beneath a counter whereby they are supported. Provision is normally made for locking them in position. The front face of a container is upwardly inclined and has an exposed top opening through which a wad of notes can be inserted. Behind the inclined front face is a barrier with a central, vertical slot. A plunger mechanism hinged near the bottom of the barrier can be manipulated, when notes have been inserted, to push them through the slot into the body of the container.
Containers of this kind have numerous drawbacks. They are expensive to produce and are not adequately tamper proof. Money behind the slotted barrier is still accessible through the opening and can be “fished” using, for example, adhesive tape. The relatively clumsy plunger mechanism can trap fingers and damage nails.
An object of one aspect of the present invention is to improve upon current arrangements and to provide a more tamper-proof apparatus which is nevertheless easy to use with less danger of injury.
Security firms are reluctant to handle the rigid containers and require the money to be taken out of them and bagged before they will transport it to the bank. This places considerable demands on the staff of the counting room, which is not justified by any real need that the money should be manually counted before it is taken away. Even if a security firm can be persuaded to take the containers they present transport and storage problems because of their bulk and rigidity, and as they are too expensive to be disposable there is the additional problem of their return.
The present invention proceeds from the recognition that it is an unnecessary expense to employ a rigid container. No container, however strong, will withstand a determined attempt to breach it. All that is in practice necessary is to be able to determine immediately and with certainty that a breach has occurred so that the culprit can be identified.
In accordance with the present invention there is provided a tamper-evident enclosure for the storage and transport of bank notes, the enclosure comprising a frame spanned by a flexible material, the frame having parallel sides provided with flanges under which side edges of a cover plate may be received, whereby the cover plate can be slid under the flanges to close the frame, a leading end of the cover plate being provided with a tongue which enters a correspondingly shaped, hollow formation at the leading end of the frame as the cover plate fully closes the frame and latch means to prevent withdrawal of the tongue from said hollow formation once received therein.
The tongue may be breakable and said hollow formation can be bent down and the arrangement may be such that the cover plate can be removed by continued movement in the same direction once the tongue is broken and bent down with the hollow formation.
Said latch means may comprise rearwardly and outwardly extending fins on the lateral edges of the tongue which will be deflected as the tongue enters said hollow formation to prevent withdrawal of the tongue therefrom. The hollow formation is preferably of a material soft enough to be bitten into by the fins if an attempt is made to withdraw the tongue from the hollow formation.
Alternatively the latch means may comprise opposite saw-tooth formations on the frame and on the cover plate which, when mutually engaged, ensure that the cover plate can be slid relative to the frame only in one direction. Said saw-tooth formations are preferably under the flanges of the frame and on said side edges of the cover plate.
Said flexible material may be an elasticated material.
The frame may be adapted to be snap-fitted into the top of an open-topped container which is locatable in a housing, the container being held in the housing by a catch which is disengaged by the cover plate as the latter fully closes the frame.
There may be hinged to parallel sides of the frame flaps biased to remain in a co-planar attitude, stop means being provided to prevent said flaps rising above the frame, said flaps being deflectable to allow passage of one or more bank notes to be bagged in the flexible material.
End edges of the flaps may have protrusions which are forced past the adjacent end member of the frame as one or more bank notes are pushed through the frame, the protrusions engaging the underside of said end member to prevent the flaps rising from the frame when the pushing force is relieved.
Preferred embodiments of the present invention will now be described by way of non-limitative example with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
The tamper-evident enclosure for the storage and transport of bank notes of the present invention is intended primarily, but not exclusively, for use in connection with the apparatus disclosed in our co-pending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/362,900 proceeding from International Patent Application No. PCT/GB01/03831 published as WO 02/019289. Reference is made to that publication for a clearer understanding of the present invention. Briefly, bank notes are placed in a tray 13 which is then slid through a slot into a box like housing 10 (see
In accordance with the present invention the container 12 (
When the lever 15 is depressed (
To remove the full bag 108 from the housing 10 its door is opened. At this point however the container 12 on which the frame 107 is mounted cannot be pulled out of the housing. When the container 12 was pushed into the housing projections 112 at the back of the container first lifted and then engaged with respective catches 113 at the back of the housing (
By this arrangement the frame 107 must be sealed by a cover plate 111 before it can be removed from the housing. With the door open and before inserting a cover plate 111 there is insufficient space above the container 12 to enable notes to be “fished” out of the bag 108. The notes are in any event in compression between the material 108 and the undersides of the flaps 21A,22A of the frame 107.
After removal from the container 12 the notes within the “bag” 108 are fully sealed by the cover plate 111 which closes the frame 107. Hooks 114A at the back of the cover plate 111 extend over the rear edge of the bag 108 and will have to be broken if the latter is pulled away from the frame 107 to gain access to the notes within the bag.
As shown in
In the modification illustrated in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0021014.6 | Aug 2000 | GB | national |
0021016.1 | Aug 2000 | GB | national |
This Application is a Continuation-in-Part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/362,900 filed on Feb. 25, 2003 and claims all the priority dates of the latter.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10362900 | Feb 2003 | US |
Child | 11281329 | Nov 2005 | US |