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FBI arrests Florida man suspected in 20 East Coast bank heists

The FBI released a photo of Luis Alomar, wanted for at least 20 robberies along the Eastern Seaboard.
(FBI / Associated Press)
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WASHINGTON -- A bank robbery suspect from South Florida was arrested by FBI agents after a string of approximately 20 heists along the Eastern Seaboard, authorities announced Tuesday.

Officials said Luis A. Alomar, 37, was arrested about 2:30 a.m. Tuesday in the Long Island suburb of Medford, N.Y. He was being held on state and federal charges in connection with the robberies, which began in August.

Agents said Alomar used firearms or threatening notes to carry out the crimes. They also said the short, stocky and bald suspect wore a “heavy puffy jacket” or a large brown cowboy hat to hide his appearance during the robberies.

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FBI officials in New York said they were still sorting out which jurisdiction would prosecute Alomar, and he was not immediately taken before a judge to enter a plea.

According to a federal complaint in Wilmington, Del., FBI Agent Scott Austin Duffey said Alomar robbed the HSBC Bank there on Sept. 16, getting about $74,000 after threatening a teller, taking cash from her drawer and seizing bundles of money from the bank vault.

“I HAVE A FULLY LOADED HANDGUN!!” Alomar demanded in his note, according to the complaint. “THIS IS A ROBBERY. YOU WILL ... DIE WITH A BLINK OF AN EYE ... 100s 50s 20s FROM BOTH DRAWERS.”

Law enforcement officials said he threatened the female teller, telling her, “I’ll blow your head off.” After gaining access to the vault, he forced the teller to remove her shirt so he could use it to conceal the large bags of money as he fled.

In the complaint, Duffey said that the Wilmington robbery “fit a pattern” of thefts from banks in Connecticut, New York, New Jersey, Maryland and Florida, and that surveillance photos matched Alomar’s description.

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richard.serrano@latimes.com

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