Two men convicted of multiple bank robberies; DNA on masks was the key to conviction
Fri, 03/29/2013
Two repeat bank robbers with a criminal history of more than 25 years were found guilty of a series of robberies in the Seattle area The U.S. Attorney's office announced March 28. One of the robberies was committed in West Seattle at the Washington Federal Bank branch on Oct. 20, 2011.
In a press release from the office of Jenny A. Durkan U.S. Attorney details were provided:
66-year-old Jack P. Sexton and 65-year-old Ronald C. Kettels were convicted of conspiracy to commit bank robbery, three armed bank robberies, and using a firearm during a crime of violence. The jury deliberated for about a day before finding the men guilty following a seven-day trial. Both men face a mandatory minimum 57 years in prison when sentenced by U.S. District Judge Robert S. Lasnik on June 21, 2013.
According to testimony at trial and records filed in the case, the two men were linked to three bank robberies in the Seattle area between August and October 2011. On August 8, 2011, the two men robbed a Key Bank branch on Holman Road in north Seattle. In that case, the men used a bandana and a T-shirt to disguise their faces. They pointed a handgun at the tellers and threatened to kill them if they did not lie down on the floor.
They next robbed the Wells Fargo bank branch on Greenwood Avenue in Shoreline on September 12, 2011. The men wore masks: one of an elderly man, the other of President Richard Nixon. The men were armed with a pistol grip shotgun and a handgun.
In the West Seattle robbery one wore a Hillary Clinton mask, the other the same “elderly man” mask as in the previous robbery. Again they pointed the pistol grip shotgun and handgun at the tellers and demanded money.
Key information in the case came from an alert neighbor at one of the robberies who noted the license plate number of the getaway car. The car was ultimately linked to Sexton, and the person who had sold him the vehicle knew where Sexton and Kettels were living. Both had recently been released from prison. A search of their vehicles and residence turned up bags used in the robberies as well as four firearms—including the ones used in the robberies. Investigators also found the masks used in the robbery, and DNA on the inside of the masks linked them to both men.
Both men have numerous prior convictions. Kettels has convictions dating back to 1963 for assault, burglary, and bank robbery. Similarly, Sexton has convictions dating back to the 1960s for burglary, forgery, and armed bank robbery.
The case was investigated by the FBI’s Seattle Safe Streets Task Force, which includes investigators from the Seattle Police Department, as well as the King County Sheriff’s Office
The case was prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorneys Andrew Friedman and Francis Franze-Nakamura.