🚨🧙♂️ THE “INVISIBLE SPELL” BANK ROBBERY THAT BACKFIRED INSTANTLY 😱💸 | REAL STORY FROM IRAN 🇮🇷

🚨🧙♂️ THE “INVISIBLE SPELL” BANK ROBBERY THAT BACKFIRED INSTANTLY 😱💸 | REAL STORY FROM IRAN 🇮🇷
An Iranian man once paid the equivalent of roughly $500 to a fake sorcerer, believing a set of magic spells tied to his arm would make him completely invisible. Convinced the trick would work, he walked into a Tehran bank and began snatching banknotes directly from customers’ hands — fully expecting no one could see him.
It did not go as planned. The customers could see him perfectly well, and they quickly overpowered him on the spot.
In court, the man told the judge he had been deceived by the sorcerer who sold him the spells. “I made a mistake,” he said. “I understand now what a big trick was played on me.” Authorities launched a search for the fake sorcerer who had taken his money.
The incident was originally reported by Iran’s Jam-e Jam newspaper in November 2002 and was later picked up by international outlets. The story has resurfaced online many times over the years, often with the wrong date attached — the viral version currently circulating claims it happened in 2016, but the actual event took place more than two decades ago.
The bank robber was not only caught instantly, he had also been scammed out of his money before the robbery even began.
