Philly Daily ran my Crime Beat column today on a home invader who was sentenced to 22 years in prison. You can read the column via the link below or the text below:
Davis: Serial home invader gets 22 years in prison - Philly Daily
I recall some years ago speaking to a Philadelphia detective about home invasions. He was part of a task force that was investigating the home invasions of several Asians families who owned and operated restaurants, laundromats and other small businesses in Philadelphia and the suburbs.
A
gang of criminals followed the Asian owners to their homes after they closed
their businesses. As the business owners settled in, the armed robbers broke in
and tied up the family members. The husband and father was beaten until he told
the home invaders where he kept his cash.
“Asian
and other immigrant small businesspeople often don’t trust banks, and they like
to keep their money close at hand,” the detective told me. “So they make an
easy target for home invasions. These brutal armed crooks bust in and threaten
the victims with torture and murder unless they give up their money.
“These
criminal predators watch the businesses, find out where the owners live and
then they strike. I’ve taken statements from the traumatized victims. A lot of
the terrified victims, including children, believe the crooks will come back
and rob them again. We have to take these armed home invaders off the street.”
One
recent armed home invader was taken off the street and sentenced to prison last
week.
The U.S. Attorney’s Office, Eastern District of Pennsylvania
announced on November 21st that Shaquan Brown, 31, of Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania, was sentenced by United States District Court Judge Cynthia M.
Rufe to 272 months’ incarceration for conspiracy to commit armed home invasion
robberies targeting the businesses and attached residences of their owners, as
well as robbery affecting interstate commerce and attempted robbery affecting
interstate commerce, using and brandishing a firearm during and in relation to
a crime of robbery, and possession of a firearm by a felon.
Brown
was charged with these crimes in August 2020, and he was convicted on April 16,
2024.
According
to the U.S. Attorney’s Office, from November 2019 through January 3, 2020,
Brown and three co-conspirators conspired to carry out a series of robberies
that targeted business owners and another individual that they believed would
keep cash in their home. The offenders used zip ties, duct tape, and firearms
to commit these crimes.
“Brown
researched his victims and their businesses, using a GPS tracking device to
learn where the victims lived. The defendant and his co-conspirators targeted
victims they believed kept cash in their homes, including business owners who
were Asian and other business owners who dealt in cash,” the prosecutors stated.
“On
the night of December 31, 2019, Brown and two co-conspirators accosted the
owner of a nail salon in Delaware County, Pa., as the owner returned to the
business. The offenders forced the victim inside, and repeatedly demanded
money, placing zip ties on the owner’s wrists, covering his mouth with duct
tape, and striking his face with their fists and a gun. The men took cash from
the business, then forced the owner to his residence, where they encountered
his wife, their children, and their nanny.
“The
men zip-tied the wife and all of their children, then continued to beat and
injure the owner, and demand money. They ransacked the residence while making
statements such as “we have been watching you for weeks.””
The U.S.
Attorney’s Office also stated that on the morning of January 3, 2020, Brown and
another individual attempted to break into a residence in Chester County, Pa. The
defendant had planned to commit an armed home invasion robbery of the
homeowner, who was a business owner, and his family, to steal the owner’s
business proceeds. While attempting to enter the victim’s home, the home
security alarm system went off, and the police responded within minutes. Brown led
the police on a foot chase through the woods and into a creek, where he was
arrested. The police recovered duct tape, zip ties, and a firearm from Brown’s backpack.
“What
Shaquan Brown and his crew put their victims through was utterly horrifying,”
said U.S. Attorney David Metcalf. “No one should have to endure a violent
ambush in their home or business, be brutally beaten, and see their family
traumatized. Today’s sentence ensures that Brown’s home invasion days are over.
We will not permit criminals who’d rather take money than make it to terrorize
innocent people and whole communities.”
Eric
DeGree, the Special Agent in Charge of the ATF Philadelphia Field Division,
added “Shaquan Brown violently terrorized his victims in their business and in
the sanctity of their home. He is now going to federal prison where he will no
longer endanger his neighborhood. ATF Philadelphia Field Division has a long
history of partnership with the Philadelphia Police Department and U.S.
Attorney’s Office, and we will continue to work tirelessly together to ensure
justice for the victims and to make our communities safer.”
Note: In the above photo Shaquan
Brown drops his pistol outside a home he attempted to rob. The photo released by the Department of Justice.
Paul Davis’s Crime Beat column appears here weekly. He is also a frequent contributor to Broad + Liberty and Counterterrorism magazine. He can be reached at pauldavisoncrime.com.
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