Bank Robber/Attempted Carjacker Enters Guilty
Plea in Federal Court
Civilians Thwarted Bank Robber's Attempt to Carjack Woman Outside of a
Wells Fargo Bank in North Fort Worth
FORT
WORTH, TX—A bank robber who attempted
to carjack a woman after he had robbed a bank in
far North Fort Worth earlier this summer pled guilty
today in federal court in Fort Worth, announced U.S.
Attorney Richard B. Roper of the Northern District
of Texas. Larry Don Enos, 57, pled guilty to
bank robbery, two counts of using or carrying a firearm
during a crime of violence, and one count of carjacking.
He faces a maximum statutory sentence of life in
prison
and a $1 million fine. He is scheduled to be
sentenced by U.S. District Judge John McBryde on
December 5, 2008.
On
June 13, 2008, Enos entered the Wells Fargo Bank
located at 2850 Heritage Trace Parkway
in Fort Worth carrying a .32 caliber semi-automatic
pistol and wearing a disguise that included a
wig, sunglasses, and fake mustache and beard. He
approached the bank manager in the lobby and pointed
the pistol in his direction and demanded
money. The
manager took Enos to a teller station where Enos
again demanded money from a teller. While
the teller complied, Enos pointed the pistol in
the direction
of the people in the bank's lobby and
made a broad sweeping motion with the firearm.
Enos then placed a bag he was carrying on the counter
and ordered the teller to put the money in the
bag, telling the bank manager that he would have
to drive
him away from the bank. The manager said
he couldn't leave, but he gave Enos his car
keys instead and told him where his car was located.
When Enos wasn't able to find the bank manager's
car, he approached an SUV with two children in
the backseat that was in the bank's drive-through
lane. Enos pointed the pistol directly at
the SUV's driver, holding it about 12 inches
from the driver's face, and demanded that
the driver get out of the vehicle. When the
driver told Enos that there were children in the
backseat, he
said he didn't care. At that point,
Enos was tackled by citizens who saw him trying
to carjack
this vehicle and its occupants. The citizens
managed to subdue Enos and hold him until police
arrived to arrest him. Once the citizens
had Enos subdued, Enos told one of them that he
was lucky
that he had not killed him.
U.S.
Attorney Roper praised the investigative efforts
of the FBI and the Fort Worth Police Department.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Robert A. Klinck is prosecuting
the case.
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