Close X
Tuesday, December 3, 2024
ADVT 
National

Desi 'Bombshell Bandit', Sandeep Kaur, Jailed For 66 Months For Robbing Four Banks In Three US State

Darpan News Desk IANS, 08 Apr, 2015 10:00 AM
    An Indian-origin woman from California, nicknamed the "Bombshell Bandit" and convicted of robbing four banks in three US states, has been sentenced to 66 months in prison.
     
    Sandeep Kaur, 24, of Union City, California, was sentenced in the federal district court in St. George in the US state of Utah on Tuesday, according to a St. George News report. Her attorney, Jay Winward, unsuccessfully requested for a lesser sentence for Kaur.
     
    Kaur pleaded guilty in January to four felony charges of bank robberies that occurred during the summer of 2014. 
     
    Kaur's crime spree began in California and ended after robbing the US Bank in the city of St. George, and leading police officers on a high-speed pursuit to Nevada, where she was arrested after an hour-long stand-off.
     
    Winward asked the court for a sentence of 48 months. He told the court that Kaur was young, well-educated, capable of paying restitution, and had no prior criminal history. 
     
    She was raised in a traditional Indian family and grew up feeling "trapped" and bullied, Winward said. 
     
    She had run from an arranged marriage, to her boyfriend, whom she subsequently married. However, the relationship turned abusive, Winward said.
     
     
    After making some money in the stock market, Kaur ended up in Las Vegas, acquiring a gambling addiction and becoming indebted to loan sharks, according to the attorney.
     
    He told the court that Kaur was not a run-of-the-mill criminal, but rather a "good, wholesome person who made some horrible decisions".
     
    Kaur felt remorse, Winward said, and had been a model prisoner; and she had turned back to her religion. She was willing and capable of paying back the money she had stolen in the bank robberies, and could become a useful member of society, he said.
     
    Winward also said that even though Kaur threatened violence during the robberies, she was not a violent person and did not have a firearm or explosives during the robberies.
     
    However, prosecuting attorney Paul Kohler said that during the robberies, the bank tellers did not know Kaur did not have a weapon, and so were afraid for their lives. The tellers were "trapped", as were the families driving on the I-15 motorway during the police chase, and the police officers who responded.
     
    Before pronouncing the sentence, US District Judge Ted Stewart called the case "complex", citing both the violence of Kaur's crimes, and her intelligence and opportunities. Kaur graduated from high school at the age of 15, and from nursing school at 19, he said.
     
    However, the circumstances of Kaur's life explained, but did not justify the crimes, the judge said, and did not warrant a lesser sentence. The public must be protected, he said.
     
     
    Besides serving 66 months in prison, Kaur was ordered to repay the $40,000 taken in the four robberies.
     
    According to the US Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), Kaur derives her nickname of "Bombshell Bandit" from the bomb threats she made during the robberies.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Police Charge Man In Deaths Of Young Brothers Who Were Asphyxiated By Python

    Police Charge Man In Deaths Of Young Brothers Who Were Asphyxiated By Python
    CAMPBELLTON, N.B. — Police in New Brunswick have charged a man with criminal negligence causing death after two young brothers were asphyxiated by a python.

    Police Charge Man In Deaths Of Young Brothers Who Were Asphyxiated By Python

    B.C. Auditor Rips Performance Of Government's $182 Million Computer System

    B.C. Auditor Rips Performance Of Government's $182 Million Computer System
    VICTORIA — The B.C. government has spent seven years and $182 million trying to modernize aging computer systems in the social services ministries, but the province's auditor general says only one-third of that goal has been achieved.

    B.C. Auditor Rips Performance Of Government's $182 Million Computer System

    Baby Boom Continues For Endangered J Pod Orcas With New Calf Spotted Off B.C.

    Baby Boom Continues For Endangered J Pod Orcas With New Calf Spotted Off B.C.
    GALIANO ISLAND, B.C. — Researchers say yet another baby has been born to an endangered population of orcas off British Columbia's coast.

    Baby Boom Continues For Endangered J Pod Orcas With New Calf Spotted Off B.C.

    Leaders' Personal Info Revealed In Australian G20 Summit Privacy Breach: Guardian

    Leaders' Personal Info Revealed In Australian G20 Summit Privacy Breach: Guardian
    TORONTO — A published report says personal details of world leaders attending last November's G20 summit in Australia were accidentally disclosed to the organizers of an Asian Cup soccer tournament.

    Leaders' Personal Info Revealed In Australian G20 Summit Privacy Breach: Guardian

    G20 Officer Committed Battery, Violated Rights Of Protester, Court Rules

    G20 Officer Committed Battery, Violated Rights Of Protester, Court Rules
    TORONTO — A police officer who gained widespread notoriety for telling a protester at the infamous G20 summit that "this ain't Canada right now" committed battery when he manhandled him, Ontario's top court has concluded.

    G20 Officer Committed Battery, Violated Rights Of Protester, Court Rules

    Britain's Celebrity Chef Jamie Oliver Expands Food Crusade To G20, Cites Diet Problems In Canada

    Britain's Celebrity Chef Jamie Oliver Expands Food Crusade To G20, Cites Diet Problems In Canada
    OTTAWA — Jamie Oliver, Britain's celebrity chef, has thrown down the gauntlet — or maybe it's an oven mitt — to Canadian politicians to join his international campaign for mandatory diet education in rich countries.

    Britain's Celebrity Chef Jamie Oliver Expands Food Crusade To G20, Cites Diet Problems In Canada