KANSAS CITY, Mo. — David M. Ketchmark,
Acting United States Attorney for the Western District of Missouri, announced
that a Kansas City, Mo., man was sentenced today for his role in two armed bank
robberies in 2006 in which he shot and killed a security guard.
Iralee E. French, Jr., 25, of Kansas
City, was sentenced by U.S. District Judge Gary A. Fenner to 87 years in
federal prison without parole.
On July 22, 2011, French was convicted
of participating in a conspiracy to commit armed bank robbery in connection
with two robbery attempts at United Missouri Bank, 7901 Wornall Road in Kansas
City, in February 2006. During the second robbery attempt at the bank on Feb.
24, 2006, French shot 70–year–old security guard Dwight W. Mayhugh, Sr., who
died the next day.
French’s co–conspirator, Thirplus Moose,
24, of Kansas City, pleaded guilty on July 8, 2011, to conspiracy to commit
bank robbery, armed bank robbery with forcible restraint and discharging a
firearm during a crime of violence resulting in death. Moose is scheduled to be
sentenced on Friday, June 29, 2012. Under the terms his plea agreement, Moose
could be sentenced to 22 to 25 years in federal prison without parole.
French and Moose used a shotgun to rob
United Missouri Bank on Feb. 9, 2006. During that robbery, they confronted a
bank teller in an underground parking garage as she was about to enter the bank
at approximately 6:40 a.m. French pointed a shotgun at the teller, who was
forced to give the robbers $8,263 from her teller station. After returning to
the parking garage, the teller was ordered at gunpoint to get into the trunk of
her vehicle, which she repeatedly refused to do. When she began screaming and
crying, the robbers left the bank with the teller’s vehicle, which was
recovered the next day after being abandoned by the robbers.
French and Moose returned to the bank on
Feb. 24, 2006. Using a shotgun, the robbers confronted Mayhugh when he drove
into the same underground parking garage. French shot Mayhugh in the right
shoulder and neck from approximately 10 feet away through the driver’s side
window of his vehicle. The robbers then forced Mayhugh out of his vehicle and
into the bank. They demanded access to money, but Mayhugh responded that he did
not have access to bank money. The robbers then stole Mayhugh’s 2002 Geo
Tracker and drove it away from the parking lot. The vehicle was recovered later
the same day.
Mayhugh, bleeding from severe chest and
neck wounds, walked to the convenience store across the street from the bank
and told the store clerk he had been shot. The clerk immediately called 911 for
an ambulance. Another store clerk, seeing Mayhugh’s blood–soaked shirt and wounds
in the neck and throat area, got a chair for him to sit on. The clerks placed
towels over the wounds until paramedics arrived at the store. Mayhugh was
transported to a hospital for treatment, but died the next day.
Law enforcement officers were unable to
develop substantial leads or investigative progress in the bank robberies
throughout the remainder of 2006, 2007 and a portion of 2008. On Aug. 12–13,
2008, law enforcement officers conducted a large scale re–canvas of the area
around 23rd Street and Oakley in Kansas City. Nearly 500 houses were targeted
to be canvassed in this operation. As a result of the publicity related to this
re–canvas, a Yellow Cab taxi driver came forward and provided information
related to the investigation. The taxi driver told investigators that, on the
morning of the bank robbery, he picked up two men in the area of 5609 E. 23rd
(the same area where the stolen vehicles were recovered) and drove them to the
area of 79th Street and Brookside (a block east of United Missouri Bank), where
he dropped them off.
Law enforcement investigators connected
the telephone number that was used to call the taxi company with the telephone
number provided by Moose, who had been contacted during the original canvas of
the 23rd Street area on the day of the fatal bank robbery attempt.
This case is being prosecuted by Acting
U.S. Attorney David M. Ketchmark. It was investigated by the FBI, the Kansas
City, Mo., Police Department, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and
Explosives, the U.S. Marshal’s Service, the U.S. Immigration and Customs
Enforcement (ICE) Office of Homeland Security Investigations and the U.S.
Postal Inspection Service.
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