Photos: Bank robberies in Tucson area
- Updated
A slideshow of bank robbery attempts, both failed and successful, in Tucson over the last two years.
- Carmen Duarte Arizona Daily Star
- Updated
Pima County sheriff's deputies are asking the public for help in identifying a man linked to a bank robbery on Tucson's northwest side Monday.
Deputies responded to U.S. Bank, 7110 N. Oracle Road, at East Ina Road at about noon to reports of a robbery, said Deputy Ryan Inglett, a spokesman for the sheriff's department.
A man entered Safeway, which is where the bank is located, and handed the teller a bag and demanded cash from the drawer. The teller handed the cash to the robber and he left the bank, said Inglett.
The robber, which was captured on a surveillance camera, was described as a white man in his 40s. He is about 6 feet tall and has a medium build.
He was last seen wearing a dark baseball cap over a ski hat. He wore sunglasses, a white-button-down long-sleeved shirt, and dark pants, Inglett said.
Robbery assault detectives believe the man also committed a robbery at the bank Dec. 9, 2016.
Anyone with information is asked to call 911, or 88-CRIME, an anonymous tipster hotline.
- Carmen Duarte Arizona Daily Star
- Updated
FBI agents arrested the suspected "Barrel Chested Bandit" in Tucson Tuesday at a hotel, according to federal court documents.
Anthony James Lane, 50, was arrested without incident by federal agents with the assistance of Tucson Police Department officers, states a news release.
Lane is a suspect in 11 bank robberies across Texas, Arizona, New Mexico, Utah and Colorado between Aug. 24, 2016 and Feb. 4, 2017, officials say.
The robberies started on Aug. 24 at the Arizona Central Credit Union at 787 S. Alvernon Way, north of East 22nd Street, authorities said. The robber wore a baseball cap in all the robberies, and sunglasses in six of the robberies, said authorities.
During each incident, the man pulled out a handgun and demanded money from the teller before leaving the bank on foot. No one was injured in the robberies.
According to a criminal complaint filed in U.S. District Court, the FBI says Lane robbed Arizona Central Credit Union of $4,665.
During the robbery, a man approached the teller counter, pulled out of his waistband what appeared to be a black semi-automatic handgun, and pointed the weapon at the teller.
He demanded that the teller give him all the money, and then he left the bank.
After that robbery, bank robberies were committed in the other states, according to the complaint. Earlier this month, the FBI put out multi-state news releases for the robber dubbed the Barrel Chested Bandit, and based on a tip Feb. 14 agents spoke to three former co-workers of Lane in Tucson.
The three reviewed video surveillance photos of the Arizona Central Credit Union robbery and "positively identified Lane as the person depicted in the photo," according to the court document.
On Tuesday, Lane was located at a Tucson Quality Inn and during an interview with FBI agents Lane admitted to the Arizona Central Credit Union robbery, and the other robberies in the four other states, states the complaint.
- Arizona Daily Star
- Updated
A man wearing a Santa hat was caught on camera robbing a bank Friday.
Pima County Sheriff's are asking the public for help finding the man who robbed the U.S. bank at 7110 N. Oracle Road around 4 p.m.
The man was wearing a University of Arizona hat over the Santa hat when he entered the bank, located inside a Safeway store, and demanded the bank teller fill up a bag with cash from the drawer, the sheriff's department said in a news release.
He was last seen wearing a red button-down, long-sleeve shirt and jeans. He is about 5 feet, 10 inches tall, Caucasian, and in his mid-50s.
Anyone with information can call 911 or submit an anonymous tip at 88-CRIME.org.
- Carmen Duarte Arizona Daily Star
- Updated
A man wearing a wig and carrying a leopard print purse robbed a bank Tuesday on Tucson's southeast side, police said.
Shortly before 2 p.m., a man entered Safeway at 6360 E. Golf Links Road and walked into the U.S. Bank branch. The man inquired about opening an account, police said.
When he was asked for identification, the man pulled out a handgun and pointed it at the teller and demanded money, said police. He was given an undisclosed amount of cash and then he then ran from the store.
The man, who was captured on a surveillance camera, is described as an African American who is between 25 to 30 years old. He was about 6 feet tall and has a thin build.
He was last seen wearing a gray long-sleeved shirt with "New York 76" on the front, blue jeans and sunglasses.
Investigators ask that anyone with information call 88-CRIME, an anonymous tipster hotline.
- Arizona Daily Star
- Updated
A man robber the Wells Fargo at 1370 N. Silverbell Road on Saturday, Aug. 6, and Tucson police are asking for the public's help in identifying him, Sgt. Kimberly Bay says.
Police released two surveillance photos of the robber. Anyone with information about him is asked to call 88-CRIME.
A man linked to a bank robbery who was fatally shot during a cross-town chase in Tucson had served time in state prison for robbery and aggravated assault, records show.
Jesus Isaac Rael, 31, was mortally wounded after firing at a police officer then trying to steal a second police squad car in a series of crimes that started Thursday afternoon and stretched across the city.
The incident began when Marana officers attempted to arrest Rael on a felony arrest warrant for bank robbery.
Rael served several years in an Arizona state prison for felony charges from Maricopa County that included robbery, unlawful use of means of transportation and misconduct involving weapons, according to online records from the Arizona Department of Corrections.
After his release in 2008, he was arrested in Yuma and convicted of felony aggravated assault, where he served a three-year sentence, prison records show.
In May 2013, he was arrested in Pima County on a warrant for leaving the jurisdiction of his parole without permission, records show. He was returned to prison and released in March 2014.
Marana police said Friday that surveillance photos taken during the Wednesday robbery at the Bank of America, on North Cortaro Road near Interstate 10, helped detectives identify Rael as the robber.
Also, a citizen gave police a license plate number of the car used in the robbery. The department said it obtained a felony arrest warrant for Rael and notified surrounding agencies that he was wanted in connection with the robbery.
Rael was driving that car, a 2010 Chevrolet Cobalt, when confronted by Marana police officers trying to arrest him Thursday afternoon on Tucson’s southwest side. He fled in the car, but crashed at I-19 and West Ajo Way, Marana police said.
After an exchange of gunfire with police, Rael escaped in a stolen Marana police car.
There were at least seven Marana police officers on the scene at the time of the shootout, said department spokesman Sgt. Chris Warren.
Rael was then linked to a carjacking on West Valencia Road in which the car’s owner suffered serious injuries when the gunman ran him over in the Chevrolet Malibu he was stealing, police said.
The chase resumed when the stolen Malibu was spotted by Tucson police in midtown. The driver crashed trying to turn onto East Eighth Street from North Campbell Avenue.
He fired a shotgun at TPD Officer Matthew Keena; Keena fired back and wounded Rael.
Rael then tried to escape by stealing Keena’s squad car, police say. Two other Tucson police officers used their squad cars to prevent an escape. Rael died later at the hospital.
Keena was hired by TPD three and a half years ago. He was not injured in the shootout. He has been placed on administrative leave, a standard procedure in all officer-involved shootings.
A criminal investigation, and an administrative investigation, to see whether departmental procedures were followed, are being conducted.
On Friday, TPD also released a photo of the shotgun Rael used to shoot at officers.
Marana police identified the two officers who exchanged gunfire with Rael as Officer Abel Samano, a 10-year veteran, and Officer Gabriel Tapia, a five-year member of the force.
Neither officer was injured and both have been placed on paid administrative leave during the investigation, which is standard procedure, Warren said.
- Arizona Daily Star
- Updated
Pima County sheriff's detectives believe a man who robbed a bank in the Tucson area today also robbed the same bank in 2015. They're asking for public help in identifying him.
A Sheriff's Department spokeswoman, Deputy Courtney Rodriguez, gave the following account in a news release:
Today at about 11:45 a.m. deputies with the San Xavier Patrol District responded to a bank robbery at the Wells Fargo inside a Safeway store at 2940 W. Valencia Road.
The robber was described as Hispanic with a light complexion, a mustache and light brown eyes. He was middle aged, approximately 5’ 8” tall, and had a heavy build. He was last seen wearing a black hat with yellow writing or symbol on it, a blue denim shirt, jeans, black shoes, and prescription glasses.
No one was injured during the incident. The robber implied a weapon as he demanded money from bank employees.
Detectives believe this is the same man who robbed the same bank on Sept. 11 of last year. Anyone with information on him is asked to call 911 or 88-CRIME.
- Carmen Duarte Arizona Daily Star
- Updated
A man brandished a weapon and demanded money Tuesday during a robbery of a Wells Fargo branch inside a north-side Basha's Supermarket, police said.
The man walked into Wells Fargo at 3275 N. Swan Road at about 1:30 p.m., and brandished a weapon and showed the teller a note demanding money, according to a Tucson Police Department Facebook post.
The robber, who was captured on surveillance cameras, was given an undisclosed amount of money and he left.
The man is described as white, between 30 to 50 years old, and about 5 feet 11 inches tall. He weighed about 180 pounds and had brown hair. He was wearing a large tan hat, dark green jacket, tan shorts and had a blue backpack.
Investigators are asking the public for help in identifying the robber.
Anyone with information is asked to call 911 or 88-CRIME.
- Carmen Duarte Arizona Daily Star
- Updated
A South Tucson Chase Bank branch was robbed Friday afternoon — the second time within two weeks.
At 2:40 p.m., South Tucson Police Department officers responded to Chase Bank at 1818 S. Sixth Avenue to a report of a robbery.
The bank is on the northwest corner of South Sixth Avenue and West 29th Street.
When officers arrived, they learned that a man entered the bank and verbally demanded money from a teller, said Lt. Jeff Inorio, a police department spokesman.
The robber implied he had a weapon, and he left the bank with an undisclosed amount of cash, Inorio said.
Surveillance cameras captured the man on video. He was described as Hispanic and in his late 40s. He was 5 feet 8 inches tall and had a medium build.
The man was wearing a blue T-shirt, dark colored basketball shorts and a red baseball cap with a logo on the front. He also was wearing sunglasses.
Detectives ask that anyone with information call 911 or 88-CRIME.
In addition, Inorio also said that a suspect was arrested Friday in an unrelated robbery at the same bank two weeks ago. Aaron John Rogers, 40, was booked into the Pima County jail on suspicion of bank robbery.
The Tucson Police Department is looking for a man caught on video robbing a Compass Bank Wednesday morning, authorities said.
Police went to the branch, at 945 E. Grant Road, and obtained security footage taken during the robbery, which occurred shortly before 10 a.m.
The robber is considered armed and dangerous. Anyone with information about his identity is asked to call 911 or 88-CRIME.
- Carmen Duarte Arizona Daily Star
- Updated
A man robbed a South Tucson Chase Bank Monday afternoon, police said.
No one was injured during the robbery.
At about 3 p.m., police responded to the Chase Bank branch at 1818 S. Sixth Ave., to a report of a robbery, said Lt. Jeff Inorio, a South Tucson Police Department spokesman.
The bank is on the northwest corner of South Sixth Avenue and West 29th Street.
Officers said they learned that a man walked into the bank and handed a teller a note demanding money. The robber implied in the note that he had a weapon, Inorio said.
A surveillance camera captured the robber on video.
He was described as a white man who was in his late 40s or early 50s. His hair was possibly brownish-gray and medium in length. The man had a tattoo on his right forearm.
He was last seen wearing a short-sleeved gray plaid shirt, blue jeans and white tennis shoes.
Anyone with information is asked to call 911 or 88-CRIME.
- Carmen Duarte Arizona Daily Star
- Updated
Tucson police are seeking the public's help in identifying an armed robber captured on surveillance video Monday at a northeast-side Bank of America.
Shortly after 10 a.m., the man entered Bank of America, 7077 E. Tanque Verde Road, and showed a gun and demanded money from an employee, said Officer Kristopher Goins, a Tucson Police Department spokesman.
The man was given an undisclosed amount of money and he ran from the bank, Goins said.
Goins said the robber should be considered armed and dangerous.
He was described as white and between 45 to 55 years old. He is about 6 feet 2 inches tall, and weighs about 195 pounds. The man has salt and pepper hair.
Anyone with information is asked to call 911 or 88-CRIME.
- Carmen Duarte Arizona Daily Star
- Updated
The Tucson Police Department is asking the public for help in identifying a man suspected of robbing a Wells Fargo branch Tuesday.
The robbery occurred at the branch at 145 E. 22nd St. It happened shortly after 4 p.m., said Sgt. Pete Dugan, a Tucson Police Department spokesman.
The branch is just east of South Sixth Avenue.
The suspect used a threatening note, demanding money from the teller, Dugan said. He was given an undisclosed amount of cash and he ran away from the bank, Dugan said.
He was described as a white man who was about 6 feet 1 inch tall and weighs about 160 pounds. He had light brown hair.
Anyone with information is asked to call 88-CRIME or 911.
- Carmen Duarte Arizona Daily Star
Pima County sheriff's deputies are asking the public for help in identifying a man linked to a bank robbery on Tucson's northwest side Monday.
Deputies responded to U.S. Bank, 7110 N. Oracle Road, at East Ina Road at about noon to reports of a robbery, said Deputy Ryan Inglett, a spokesman for the sheriff's department.
A man entered Safeway, which is where the bank is located, and handed the teller a bag and demanded cash from the drawer. The teller handed the cash to the robber and he left the bank, said Inglett.
The robber, which was captured on a surveillance camera, was described as a white man in his 40s. He is about 6 feet tall and has a medium build.
He was last seen wearing a dark baseball cap over a ski hat. He wore sunglasses, a white-button-down long-sleeved shirt, and dark pants, Inglett said.
Robbery assault detectives believe the man also committed a robbery at the bank Dec. 9, 2016.
Anyone with information is asked to call 911, or 88-CRIME, an anonymous tipster hotline.
- Carmen Duarte Arizona Daily Star
FBI agents arrested the suspected "Barrel Chested Bandit" in Tucson Tuesday at a hotel, according to federal court documents.
Anthony James Lane, 50, was arrested without incident by federal agents with the assistance of Tucson Police Department officers, states a news release.
Lane is a suspect in 11 bank robberies across Texas, Arizona, New Mexico, Utah and Colorado between Aug. 24, 2016 and Feb. 4, 2017, officials say.
The robberies started on Aug. 24 at the Arizona Central Credit Union at 787 S. Alvernon Way, north of East 22nd Street, authorities said. The robber wore a baseball cap in all the robberies, and sunglasses in six of the robberies, said authorities.
During each incident, the man pulled out a handgun and demanded money from the teller before leaving the bank on foot. No one was injured in the robberies.
According to a criminal complaint filed in U.S. District Court, the FBI says Lane robbed Arizona Central Credit Union of $4,665.
During the robbery, a man approached the teller counter, pulled out of his waistband what appeared to be a black semi-automatic handgun, and pointed the weapon at the teller.
He demanded that the teller give him all the money, and then he left the bank.
After that robbery, bank robberies were committed in the other states, according to the complaint. Earlier this month, the FBI put out multi-state news releases for the robber dubbed the Barrel Chested Bandit, and based on a tip Feb. 14 agents spoke to three former co-workers of Lane in Tucson.
The three reviewed video surveillance photos of the Arizona Central Credit Union robbery and "positively identified Lane as the person depicted in the photo," according to the court document.
On Tuesday, Lane was located at a Tucson Quality Inn and during an interview with FBI agents Lane admitted to the Arizona Central Credit Union robbery, and the other robberies in the four other states, states the complaint.
A man wearing a Santa hat was caught on camera robbing a bank Friday.
Pima County Sheriff's are asking the public for help finding the man who robbed the U.S. bank at 7110 N. Oracle Road around 4 p.m.
The man was wearing a University of Arizona hat over the Santa hat when he entered the bank, located inside a Safeway store, and demanded the bank teller fill up a bag with cash from the drawer, the sheriff's department said in a news release.
He was last seen wearing a red button-down, long-sleeve shirt and jeans. He is about 5 feet, 10 inches tall, Caucasian, and in his mid-50s.
Anyone with information can call 911 or submit an anonymous tip at 88-CRIME.org.
- Carmen Duarte Arizona Daily Star
A man wearing a wig and carrying a leopard print purse robbed a bank Tuesday on Tucson's southeast side, police said.
Shortly before 2 p.m., a man entered Safeway at 6360 E. Golf Links Road and walked into the U.S. Bank branch. The man inquired about opening an account, police said.
When he was asked for identification, the man pulled out a handgun and pointed it at the teller and demanded money, said police. He was given an undisclosed amount of cash and then he then ran from the store.
The man, who was captured on a surveillance camera, is described as an African American who is between 25 to 30 years old. He was about 6 feet tall and has a thin build.
He was last seen wearing a gray long-sleeved shirt with "New York 76" on the front, blue jeans and sunglasses.
Investigators ask that anyone with information call 88-CRIME, an anonymous tipster hotline.
- Arizona Daily Star
A man robber the Wells Fargo at 1370 N. Silverbell Road on Saturday, Aug. 6, and Tucson police are asking for the public's help in identifying him, Sgt. Kimberly Bay says.
Police released two surveillance photos of the robber. Anyone with information about him is asked to call 88-CRIME.
A man linked to a bank robbery who was fatally shot during a cross-town chase in Tucson had served time in state prison for robbery and aggravated assault, records show.
Jesus Isaac Rael, 31, was mortally wounded after firing at a police officer then trying to steal a second police squad car in a series of crimes that started Thursday afternoon and stretched across the city.
The incident began when Marana officers attempted to arrest Rael on a felony arrest warrant for bank robbery.
Rael served several years in an Arizona state prison for felony charges from Maricopa County that included robbery, unlawful use of means of transportation and misconduct involving weapons, according to online records from the Arizona Department of Corrections.
After his release in 2008, he was arrested in Yuma and convicted of felony aggravated assault, where he served a three-year sentence, prison records show.
In May 2013, he was arrested in Pima County on a warrant for leaving the jurisdiction of his parole without permission, records show. He was returned to prison and released in March 2014.
Marana police said Friday that surveillance photos taken during the Wednesday robbery at the Bank of America, on North Cortaro Road near Interstate 10, helped detectives identify Rael as the robber.
Also, a citizen gave police a license plate number of the car used in the robbery. The department said it obtained a felony arrest warrant for Rael and notified surrounding agencies that he was wanted in connection with the robbery.
Rael was driving that car, a 2010 Chevrolet Cobalt, when confronted by Marana police officers trying to arrest him Thursday afternoon on Tucson’s southwest side. He fled in the car, but crashed at I-19 and West Ajo Way, Marana police said.
After an exchange of gunfire with police, Rael escaped in a stolen Marana police car.
There were at least seven Marana police officers on the scene at the time of the shootout, said department spokesman Sgt. Chris Warren.
Rael was then linked to a carjacking on West Valencia Road in which the car’s owner suffered serious injuries when the gunman ran him over in the Chevrolet Malibu he was stealing, police said.
The chase resumed when the stolen Malibu was spotted by Tucson police in midtown. The driver crashed trying to turn onto East Eighth Street from North Campbell Avenue.
He fired a shotgun at TPD Officer Matthew Keena; Keena fired back and wounded Rael.
Rael then tried to escape by stealing Keena’s squad car, police say. Two other Tucson police officers used their squad cars to prevent an escape. Rael died later at the hospital.
Keena was hired by TPD three and a half years ago. He was not injured in the shootout. He has been placed on administrative leave, a standard procedure in all officer-involved shootings.
A criminal investigation, and an administrative investigation, to see whether departmental procedures were followed, are being conducted.
On Friday, TPD also released a photo of the shotgun Rael used to shoot at officers.
Marana police identified the two officers who exchanged gunfire with Rael as Officer Abel Samano, a 10-year veteran, and Officer Gabriel Tapia, a five-year member of the force.
Neither officer was injured and both have been placed on paid administrative leave during the investigation, which is standard procedure, Warren said.
- Arizona Daily Star
Pima County sheriff's detectives believe a man who robbed a bank in the Tucson area today also robbed the same bank in 2015. They're asking for public help in identifying him.
A Sheriff's Department spokeswoman, Deputy Courtney Rodriguez, gave the following account in a news release:
Today at about 11:45 a.m. deputies with the San Xavier Patrol District responded to a bank robbery at the Wells Fargo inside a Safeway store at 2940 W. Valencia Road.
The robber was described as Hispanic with a light complexion, a mustache and light brown eyes. He was middle aged, approximately 5’ 8” tall, and had a heavy build. He was last seen wearing a black hat with yellow writing or symbol on it, a blue denim shirt, jeans, black shoes, and prescription glasses.
No one was injured during the incident. The robber implied a weapon as he demanded money from bank employees.
Detectives believe this is the same man who robbed the same bank on Sept. 11 of last year. Anyone with information on him is asked to call 911 or 88-CRIME.
- Carmen Duarte Arizona Daily Star
A man brandished a weapon and demanded money Tuesday during a robbery of a Wells Fargo branch inside a north-side Basha's Supermarket, police said.
The man walked into Wells Fargo at 3275 N. Swan Road at about 1:30 p.m., and brandished a weapon and showed the teller a note demanding money, according to a Tucson Police Department Facebook post.
The robber, who was captured on surveillance cameras, was given an undisclosed amount of money and he left.
The man is described as white, between 30 to 50 years old, and about 5 feet 11 inches tall. He weighed about 180 pounds and had brown hair. He was wearing a large tan hat, dark green jacket, tan shorts and had a blue backpack.
Investigators are asking the public for help in identifying the robber.
Anyone with information is asked to call 911 or 88-CRIME.
- Carmen Duarte Arizona Daily Star
A South Tucson Chase Bank branch was robbed Friday afternoon — the second time within two weeks.
At 2:40 p.m., South Tucson Police Department officers responded to Chase Bank at 1818 S. Sixth Avenue to a report of a robbery.
The bank is on the northwest corner of South Sixth Avenue and West 29th Street.
When officers arrived, they learned that a man entered the bank and verbally demanded money from a teller, said Lt. Jeff Inorio, a police department spokesman.
The robber implied he had a weapon, and he left the bank with an undisclosed amount of cash, Inorio said.
Surveillance cameras captured the man on video. He was described as Hispanic and in his late 40s. He was 5 feet 8 inches tall and had a medium build.
The man was wearing a blue T-shirt, dark colored basketball shorts and a red baseball cap with a logo on the front. He also was wearing sunglasses.
Detectives ask that anyone with information call 911 or 88-CRIME.
In addition, Inorio also said that a suspect was arrested Friday in an unrelated robbery at the same bank two weeks ago. Aaron John Rogers, 40, was booked into the Pima County jail on suspicion of bank robbery.
The Tucson Police Department is looking for a man caught on video robbing a Compass Bank Wednesday morning, authorities said.
Police went to the branch, at 945 E. Grant Road, and obtained security footage taken during the robbery, which occurred shortly before 10 a.m.
The robber is considered armed and dangerous. Anyone with information about his identity is asked to call 911 or 88-CRIME.
- Carmen Duarte Arizona Daily Star
A man robbed a South Tucson Chase Bank Monday afternoon, police said.
No one was injured during the robbery.
At about 3 p.m., police responded to the Chase Bank branch at 1818 S. Sixth Ave., to a report of a robbery, said Lt. Jeff Inorio, a South Tucson Police Department spokesman.
The bank is on the northwest corner of South Sixth Avenue and West 29th Street.
Officers said they learned that a man walked into the bank and handed a teller a note demanding money. The robber implied in the note that he had a weapon, Inorio said.
A surveillance camera captured the robber on video.
He was described as a white man who was in his late 40s or early 50s. His hair was possibly brownish-gray and medium in length. The man had a tattoo on his right forearm.
He was last seen wearing a short-sleeved gray plaid shirt, blue jeans and white tennis shoes.
Anyone with information is asked to call 911 or 88-CRIME.
- Carmen Duarte Arizona Daily Star
Tucson police are seeking the public's help in identifying an armed robber captured on surveillance video Monday at a northeast-side Bank of America.
Shortly after 10 a.m., the man entered Bank of America, 7077 E. Tanque Verde Road, and showed a gun and demanded money from an employee, said Officer Kristopher Goins, a Tucson Police Department spokesman.
The man was given an undisclosed amount of money and he ran from the bank, Goins said.
Goins said the robber should be considered armed and dangerous.
He was described as white and between 45 to 55 years old. He is about 6 feet 2 inches tall, and weighs about 195 pounds. The man has salt and pepper hair.
Anyone with information is asked to call 911 or 88-CRIME.
- Carmen Duarte Arizona Daily Star
The Tucson Police Department is asking the public for help in identifying a man suspected of robbing a Wells Fargo branch Tuesday.
The robbery occurred at the branch at 145 E. 22nd St. It happened shortly after 4 p.m., said Sgt. Pete Dugan, a Tucson Police Department spokesman.
The branch is just east of South Sixth Avenue.
The suspect used a threatening note, demanding money from the teller, Dugan said. He was given an undisclosed amount of cash and he ran away from the bank, Dugan said.
He was described as a white man who was about 6 feet 1 inch tall and weighs about 160 pounds. He had light brown hair.
Anyone with information is asked to call 88-CRIME or 911.
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