police last Friday’s photos of the bombrieven out last week, to be sure, seven of the companies are concerned. In the pictures you can see it’s going to be a small envelope with a bulge, and adresstickers. There are a type of letter it receives, it should immediately call 112, if reported to the police.

The bombrief, who on Thursday was sent to the debt collection company in Rotterdam, it was actually designed for a company based in Maastricht, the netherlands. The bombrief had to return though, as reported to the police NU.nl.

Forged sender’s information

“The letter was sent by a postsorteercentrum on the basis of the forged sender’s information arrived to the Central Collection Bureau (CIB), Rotterdam. In this letter, however, damage sustained, but it wasn’t right.”

At present, a total of seven bombrieven found in Amsterdam, Utrecht and Rotterdam, the netherlands. The affected companies have, so far, two hotels and a petrol station in Amsterdam, is a real estate agency in Utrecht, a gas station, a car dealership, and the CIB, Rotterdam.

The company, in Maastricht, was also a target, though, is the bombrief never get delivered.

This is the way the bombrieven to look like. (Photo: Police in Amsterdam, the netherlands).

PostNL has taken security measures
in The latest incident last Friday at the Okura hotel in Amsterdam have taken place. The personnel are in the area around 9: 00 a.m. to a suspicious letter found in the description corresponding to the bombrieven that other companies have been successfully delivered. There is also a 112 call.

the Recipients of the suspicious letters identified by the contact information of CIB. In “normal” letters are printed on paper, but that the defendant is the sender, the contact information, with stickers on the envelopes, will be pasted. The collection agency has nothing to do with the bombrieven.

PostNL Friday morning at NU.nl it reported that it was likely that the letters they delivered. There are already safety measures in place.

the Police: “If bombrief is closed, no risk of explosion’