Defendants led deputies on high-speed chase sometimes
exceeding 100 mph
MONROE, La. – A Monroe couple was sentenced to 69 years
collectively in prison for robbing three financial institutions at gunpoint and
for multiple firearms violations, announced United States Attorney David C. Joseph.
Lakendria Nicole Goings, 35, and David Ray Johnson, 37, were
convicted on August 1, 2019, following a four-day trial, of all counts
submitted to the jury – two counts of bank robbery, one count of credit union
robbery, and three counts of using, carrying, brandishing and discharging a
firearm during a crime of violence. In addition, Johnson was found guilty of
two counts of convicted felon in possession of a firearm.
U.S. District Judge Terry A. Doughty presided over the trial
and handed down Johnson’s sentence of 41 and a half years in prison on November
6, 2019, and sentenced Goings today to 28 years, three months in prison.
Evidence presented at trial showed that Goings and Johnson’s
spree began when they robbed the Guaranty Bank branch in Epps, Louisiana on
November 10, 2017. The defendants entered the bank wearing hoodies to obscure
their faces, and waiving semi-automatic handguns in the direction of customers
and employees. Johnson stood at the
entrance door acting as lookout and rear guard, while Goings directed the gun
at the face of a bank teller, ordering the bank teller to fill a bag with
money. The robbers left Guaranty Bank
with approximately $17,307. After the robbery, Epps Police Department officers
and West Carroll Parish Sheriff’s detectives found a cloth work glove worn by
Johnson during the robbery, several rolls of coins, and a .40 caliber
semi-automatic handgun, in a vacant lot close to the bank. DNA from the glove matched David Ray Johnson’s
DNA, which was in a North Carolina DNA database as a result of Johnson’s 2012
felony conviction for financial card theft.
The second and third robberies occurred on November 27, 2017
(Barksdale Federal Credit Union in Cotton Valley, Louisiana), and December 18,
2017 (Winnsboro State Bank in Gilbert, Louisiana). On both occasions the defendants entered
dressed in black, bulky hooded clothing with dark fabric covering their faces,
waiving semi-automatic firearms at bank customers and employees and demanding
money from the tellers. They left Barksdale FCU with $12,756, and Winnsboro
State Bank with $28,447.
After the robbers left Winnsboro State Bank with a duffel
bag full of money, Franklin Parish Sheriff’s deputies located the getaway car
and began a high-speed chase with the defendants’ Toyota Sequoia, sometimes
exceeding 100 mph. During the chase,
Johnson, who was driving, pointed a semi-automatic handgun out of the driver’s
window and fired several times at the deputies. The vehicle later crashed in a
residential area in Winnsboro, Louisiana, and the defendants surrendered to
authorities. Johnson exited the vehicle with a .40 caliber pistol in his hand,
loaded with a round in the chamber and four live rounds in the magazine, which
dropped to the ground as he submitted to arrest. This .40 caliber
semi-automatic pistol was of the same make, model and caliber handgun that
investigators found in the vacant lot near the Guaranty Bank robbery in Epps.
In the Sequoia, deputies found a duffel bag with $28,477 in
cash, black clothing, hooded jackets, black fabric consistent with the masks
worn during the robberies, and paper coin wrappers bearing handwritten account
numbers belonging to Barksdale FCU customers.
Officers also found a Double Star Brand, Model Star 15, .223-caliber
semi-automatic AR-type rifle, which Johnson had just brandished in the
Winnsboro State Bank robbery, loaded with a live round in the chamber and 27
rounds in a detachable magazine.
“Today’s sentence demonstrates our firm commitment to fight
the menace of violent crime in the Western District of Louisiana,” said U.S.
Attorney Joseph. “The lawlessness of
these defendants and the terror they caused will not be tolerated.”
The FBI, ATF, Louisiana State Police, Franklin Parish
Sheriff’s Office, East Carroll Parish Sheriff’s Office, Webster Parish
Sheriff’s Office, Epps Police Department, Cotton Valley Police Department, and
Winnsboro Police Department investigated the case. Assistant U.S. Attorneys J. Aaron Crawford
and Brandon B. Brown prosecuted the case, aided by District Attorney Mack
Lancaster’s office, Fifth Judicial District of Louisiana.
This case is part of Project Safe Neighborhoods (PSN), which
is the centerpiece of the Department of Justice’s violent crime reduction
efforts. PSN is an evidence-based
program proven to be effective at reducing violent crime. Through PSN, a broad
spectrum of stakeholders work together to identify the most pressing violent
crime problems in the community and develop comprehensive solutions to address
them. As part of this strategy, PSN focuses enforcement efforts on the most
violent offenders and partners with locally based prevention and reentry
programs for lasting reductions in crime.
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