Toronto police are asking the public for help identifying a bank robbery suspect dubbed the ‘well-dressed bandit’ who is wanted in connection with a string of hold ups across the city.

Police say the first robbery occurred on Oct. 23 at around 10:35 a.m. at a bank branch in the Rogers Road and Keele Street area.

The suspect, according to investigators, approached a teller, produced a hold up note, and showed the bank employee his handgun. Upon receiving the cash, police say he fled the scene.

Investigators say the suspect attempted to strike again at a bank in the Queens Plate Drive and Highway 17 area on Nov. 6 but walked away empty handed when other tellers took notice of him.

On Nov. 10, police say the man hit a bank branch in the area of College and Grace streets and successfully obtained a quantity of cash from a teller.

Later that afternoon, investigators say the he walked into a bank on Bloor Street West and Dovercourt Road, handed a teller a note and threatened to kill her if she did not comply with his demands. He was given the cash before fleeing the scene.

Police say in all four robberies, the man carried a black handgun and a note inside a tan-coloured portfolio.

“In his very first robbery, he was dressed in a somewhat like a suit and tie, like he had just left a job interview,” Staff Insp. Mike Earl told reporters at Toronto police headquarters Wednesday morning.

In subsequent robberies, Earl said he wore hoodies and a winter jacket.

On Wednesday, the Canadian Bankers Association announced a $10,000 reward for anyone who provides information that leads to the suspect’s arrest and conviction.

Toronto police have also released video surveillance footage of the man in hopes that a member of the public will be able to identify him.

The suspect has been described as a white man with a medium build who is five-foot-eleven to six-foot-two and could be in his late 40s to early 60s “depending on how he aged,” Earl said.

Investigators say the man is believed to be armed and dangerous.

Anyone with information is asked to contact police at 416-808-7350 or Crime Stoppers anonymously at 416-222-TIPS (8477).