When Agent Montgomery is sitting at the table telling the bank manager's wife that her husband was dead, the camera immediately pans to her face and her eyes were already red and teary as if she had been crying before.
When Bank Manager Teegan is walking from his car to enter the bank it's raining heavily and he is getting soaked. But when he is shown entering the inside of the bank he is completely dry.
At about 57 mins in when the 4 masked marauders are climbing up the stairs at the bank, behind them in the background there is a security guard with a shotgun watching them but does nothing and lets them continue with their assault of the bank.
When Mr. Hubert takes the baseball bat and shatters the table glass there were magazines on the table before but not when he hits the table with the bat. Finally, he breaks the glass completely the first time with the bat, but hits the table 2 more times and the sound effects are the same as the breaking of glass the first time even though there wasn't any glass left to break.
Bank Shootout Scene: After Christopher Meloni's character shoots one of the Marauders while protecting Hubert, the FBI team determines that they cannot identify the body due to fingerprints being burnt or sanded off and back molars being pulled. The correctly identify this level of 'commitment' to the job as being affiliated to the military. However, using this logic, the mystery soldier could have been identified, as all military entry level soldiers, cadets, and officers all give a DNA cheek swab upon being sworn in and obtaining their initial entry physicals for basic combat training. While used routinely for battlefield identification, this repository can be searched for a criminal match with a warrant signed by a federal judge.
"Freezing" someone's assets is not an immediate process; in fact it can take days or even weeks do so. There's also the problem of foreign assets being outside the direct control of US law enforcement and treasury agents.
A man as skilled in banking as Jeff Hubert would know this and would not have had the trouble that he did fleeing law enforcement.
TJ Jackson's is receives a visit from a solitary FBI agent. The FBI is known to send TWO agents whenever someone needs to be questioned and it's rare for a solo agent to do more than the occasional interview for background checks.
The actress portraying Jill is wearing a bald cap. The transition from her face to the cap is visible.
When Montgomery is contacted on his laptop by the mystery bank robber, in several side view shots the screen remains black.
In the end, when Hubert's bodyguard is being shot by Wells, he is hit in the left side of his chest, but he spins to the right.
Throughout the film, they use the term "safety deposit boxes." This is grammatically incorrect. It is "SAFE deposit boxes."
Tyler Jon Olson is correctly named at the start of the end credits, in big white letters; but then in the end crawl, he is named as just Tyler Olson.
In the very first seconds of the intro, there's a likely editing error where part of the fog from the next scene suddenly pops into view right before the cut.
When the bank robbers are sitting in the car at the start of the movie, one of the robbers taps an AR-15 magazine against his head before inserting it into his rifle. You hear the sound of the charging handle being pulled to cock the rifle but the robber doesn't touch the cocking handle.
A military unit, particularly Rangers and not Special Forces operators, would find it nearly impossible to go "rogue" as their infiltration and extraction units would have to briefed about at least the peripheral details of their assignment. This would require such a rogue to either eliminate those individuals or alter their entire mission to avoid capture.
Ironically, had the film reversed the roles of the "rogue elements" (Special Forces over Rangers) the film might have actually been plausible.