Defendant Torched One House and Attempted to Bomb Another to
Collect Debt
A Florida resident who threatened family members over a
$20,000 debt and used firebombs to torch one home and threaten another, was
sentenced today to fifteen years in prison, announced U.S. Attorney Jenny A.
Durkan. SANG NGOC UNG, 54, of Margate, Florida pleaded guilty in April 2014 to
Collection of Extension of Credit by Extortionate Means, Interstate Travel in
Aid of Racketeering Activity, Unlawful Possession of a Destructive Device and
Carrying a Firearm During and in Relation to a Crime of Violence. In his plea
agreement UNG admits that in the early morning hours of June 10, 2013 he set
fire to his relative’s home on S. Cloverdale Street in Seattle. The fire
extensively damaged the home and forced the homeowner, her adult children and a
friend to flee through a window and the garage. Shortly after that fire,
investigators went to a second home associated with the family and discovered a
destructive device that had not ignited. U.S. District Judge Richard A. Jones
imposed the sentence.
“This defendant earned every day of this sentence. He
attempted to rule his victims through fear and violence,” said U. S. Attorney
Jenny A. Durkan. “He endangered not just his targeted victims, but those who
live nearby and all first responders.”
According to records in the case, UNG had been pressuring
family members in Seattle about $20,000 he believes is owed to him. Family
members had attempted to pay some of the money, but UNG reportedly continued to
threaten them if the debt was not paid. In mid-May 2013, UNG arrived in the
Seattle area and again began pressuring the family to repay the debt. On June
9, 2013, UNG was observed attempting to contact people at both homes. The fire
and the destructive device that failed to ignite were discovered the next day.
Cell phone records place UNG in the Seattle area during the time the fire and
destructive device were set. Evidence on the destructive device ties him to the
scene. UNG returned to the Seattle area in July 2013 and was arrested by
Seattle Police and ATF agents. At the time of his arrest UNG had a firearm in
his possession and admits that he was armed during the criminal conduct in this
case.
The case was investigated by the Seattle Police Department
and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms & Explosives (ATF). The case
was prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorney Todd Greenberg.
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