The U.S. Attorney’s Office in Philadelphia released the below information:
PHILADELPHIA – United States Attorney
Jennifer Arbittier Williams announced that Christopher Larue, 44, of Lansdale,
PA, was sentenced to 25 years and one day in prison, five years of supervised
release, and was ordered to pay a $7,500 fine by United States District Judge
Gene E.K. Pratter for committing an armed bank robbery in Bucks County and then
nearly killing a Pennsylvania State Trooper in Montgomery County directly
thereafter.
In October 2021, the defendant pleaded
guilty to one count of brandishing a firearm during a crime of violence and one
count of armed bank robbery. According to court documents, in the early morning
hours of October 19, 2020, Larue entered QNB Bank in Perkasie, PA, wearing dark
clothing and a black mask as employees were arriving for work. The defendant
brandished a firearm and robbed the bank of over $11,000 in U.S. currency. He
then fled in his vehicle. A GPS tracking devices hidden with the stolen money
quickly led Pennsylvania State Police to the defendant, who had driven to his
job site in Conshohocken, PA. When the State Police arrived and attempted to
arrest him, Larue pointed a gun at the head of a trooper and pulled the
trigger, but the gun mis-fired and troopers were able to handcuff Larue. In and
around the defendant’s work locker, investigators found the stolen money,
additional ammunition, and the clothing and mask Larue wore during the robbery.
Larue previously served over 12 years in
federal prison after being convicted in 2009 of five additional bank robberies
and was on supervised release at the time of this offense.
“This sentencing is especially poignant
during a week when we have lost two Pennsylvania State Troopers who were
bravely executing their duty in the face of extreme danger,” said U.S. Attorney
Williams. “In this case, the defendant acted with complete disregard and
callousness for the lives of the Pennsylvania State Troopers and the bank
employees whom he threatened with a firearm. But for a mis-fired gun, the
outcome could have been yet another tragic loss of life. The U.S. Attorney’s
Office will not tolerate this kind of violent lawlessness.”
“Christopher Larue aimed a loaded gun at
a state trooper’s head, asked him if he wanted to die that day, and repeatedly
pulled the trigger. It was very nearly a tragedy, but thankfully the weapon
didn’t fire,” said Jacqueline Maguire, Special Agent in Charge of the FBI’s
Philadelphia Division. “That was just after Larue had held three bank employees
at gunpoint during a robbery — and that was after a previous string of bank
robberies for which he’d served time. This is a dangerous serial offender who
needs to be off the street. The FBI will continue working with the Pennsylvania
State Police and all our law enforcement partners to keep violent criminals
like Larue from committing further harm.”
The case was investigated by the Perkasie Borough Police Department, the Pennsylvania State Police, and the Federal Bureau of Investigation, with assistance from the Montgomery County District Attorney’s Office and the Bucks County District Attorney’s Office and is being prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorney Michelle L. Morgan.
No comments:
Post a Comment