LOS ANGELES
– A former Dunbar Armored Inc. employee was sentenced today to 24 months in
federal prison for orchestrating the theft of nearly $300,000 in cash out of
Dunbar’s storage facility in Vernon.
Eric
Miranda, 39, of East Los Angeles, was sentenced by United States District Judge
Dolly M. Gee, who also ordered him to pay $279,369 in restitution.
Miranda
pleaded guilty in March 2019 to one count of conspiracy to commit bank theft
and three counts of bank theft.
At the time
of the theft, Miranda was a Dunbar Armored supervisor with access privilege to
company vaults. He stole cash from the Dunbar vault by using “dummy” stacks of
$100 bills that he switched out for real stacks of $100,000. First, Miranda
created “dummy” stacks of $100,000 by taking hundreds of $1 bills and
sandwiching them between $100 bills – in order to make them appear to be stacks
of $100 bills totaling $100,000.
He then
smuggled the “dummy” stacks into the Dunbar vault, where he and his
co-conspirator, Monique Castruita, 36, of Maywood, switched them for real
stacks of $100,000. Miranda and Castruita then marked the dummy stacks to
ensure they were not placed into circulation.
Finally,
Miranda smuggled the real stacks of money out of the vault room by hiding it in
a postal box. On three occasions between October 2017 and January 2018, Miranda
smuggled a total of approximately $300,000 out of the Dunbar facility.
In March
2018, defendant’s scheme was finally exposed when a Dunbar employee discovered
19 empty money straps in the trash can of a women’s restroom. Ultimately, the
loss to Dunbar totaled $279,369.
Castruita
pleaded guilty in November 2018 to one count of conspiracy to commit bank theft
and three counts of bank theft. Her sentencing hearing is scheduled for April
29.
“Collectively, (Miranda’s) actions reflect a blatant and deliberate
abuse of his position, disregard for the integrity of financial institutions,
and disrespect for the rule of law,” prosecutors wrote in their sentencing
memorandum.
The FBI
investigated this matter and received substantial assistance from the Vernon
Police Department.
This case
was prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorneys Jeffrey M. Chemerinsky and
Joseph D. Axelrad of the Violent and Organized Crime Section.
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