'Blond Bandit' Sentenced, to Pay Thousands in Restitution
Stephanie Lynn Schwab was sentenced to 11 years for crime spree.
Stephanie Lynn Schwab, known as the "Blond Bandit," was sentenced to 132 months in prison—11 years—for a series of crimes in Virginia and Maryland.
Schwab's sentence is "for carrying out three bank robberies, stealing and carjacking three cars she used in those robberies, and participating in a heroin distribution ring operating out of Manassas," said the Eastern District United States Attorney’s Office public information officer Peter Carr.
Following her release from prison, she will also have four years of supervised release and will have to pay more than $24,000 in restitution, said Carr.
Schwab pleaded guilty to charges of bank robbery, car theft and a drug charge in federal district court in April.
“Stephanie Schwab’s reckless crime spree was a risk to the public in many different communities,” said U.S. Attorney Neil MacBride in a prepared statement. “Her complete disregard for the law and public safety justifies the lengthy sentence.”
“During a two-week period, Stephanie Schwab committed multiple crimes across various jurisdictions and put the community in danger with her reckless actions,” said Assistant Director in Charge James McJunkin in a release. “This sentence is the result of strong law enforcement cooperation to bring her to justice.”
Initially, Schwab, 27, was indicted on six charges related to a 13-day crime spree throughout Northern Virginia and Maryland: two counts of bank robbery, one count of attempted bank robbery and three counts of transporting stolen vehicles across state lines.
Schwab's crimes included a Nov. 18 robbery of a Commerce Bank near Manassas; a carjacking at knifepoint in Tysons Corner on Nov. 19; the robbery of a BB&T in West Springfield on Nov. 22; an attempted carjacking on Thanksgiving Day in Catonsville and an attempted bank robbery of a BB&T in McLean on Nov. 30.
Carr said in a releas that Schwab "admitted her participation in a separate case involving a heroin trafficking ring that purchased large supplies of heroin from sources in New York and the Washington, D.C.-metro area and distributed the heroin to customers in Manassas from 2009 through 2011."
"Fairfax County Police Department arrested Schwab following her attempted robbery of a bank on Nov. 30, 2011," said Carr in the release. "After leading law enforcement on a high-speed chase on Interstate 495 onto a local road in Montgomery County, Md., she turned the stolen vehicle into oncoming traffic and caused a three-vehicle crash."
She tried to flee on foot but was caught and arrested by the pursuing officer, said Carr.
Patch editors Lauren Sausser and Jason Spencer contributed to this report.
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John T.
8:44 am on Monday, August 20, 2012
What a peice of work! What the story doesn't tell us is she was probably represented by a public defender paid for by the taxpayers, some of whom, were put in harms way by her. Oh, and she'll probably serve a couple years of the 11 she's suppose to.