Miami Herald (Sunday)

Three South Florida men convicted of kidnapping couple, bank robbery in home invasion

- BY JAY WEAVER jweaver@miamiheral­d.com

Three South Florida men face up to life in prison after being convicted of invading a Miramar home and holding a couple at gunpoint in a plot to rob $20,000 from them, federal authoritie­s say.

After a two-week trial, a Fort Lauderdale federal jury found Kejuan Brandon Campbell, Antonio Charles James Jr. and Dionte Alexander-Wilcox guilty on one count of conspiracy to kidnap, two counts of kidnapping, three counts of bank robbery, and three counts of carrying a firearm during a crime of violence. They are scheduled for sentencing in late April before

U.S. District Judge James Cohn.

At trial, federal prosecutor­s said that on Oct. 11, 2020, Campbell, James, and Alexander-Wilcox invaded the home because the couple’s estranged nephew had stolen $20,000 from Campbell earlier that day. Wearing masks and gloves, the three men brandished firearms as they forced their way into the couple’s residence, assaulted the husband, and detained the victims on the floor by pointing guns at them, according to trial evidence.

The men ransacked the home and took the victims’ phones and a wallet, prosecutor­s said. Using the wife’s telephone, they tried using CashApp to transfer $20,000 to themselves, but the transactio­ns were declined. Campbell then forced the wife to travel with him to multiple stores to try to cash $20,000 in checks. The other two defendants kept the husband at home, holding him at gunpoint, evidence showed.

After the stores declined to process the checks, the men stayed overnight at the victims’ home and planned to obtain the money from the couple’s bank the next morning, prosecutor­s with the U.S. Attorney’s Office said.

During their overnight stay, the defendants cooked, drank alcohol, and smoked marijuana, prosecutor­s said. They kept a gun pointed at the couple inside and did not allow them to speak to each other. At one point, with gun in hand, Alexander-Wilcox forced the wife into a bedroom and raped her, according to trial evidence.

The next morning, Campbell forced the wife to withdraw $20,000 from ATMs. After Campbell brought the wife home, the three men filled a couple of suitcases with the victims’ jewelry, prosecutor­s said. They also gathered items on which they might have left their DNA.

The men threatened to kill the victims if they called the police, locked them in a bathroom and took their house key, prosecutor­s said. They left with the cash.

The case was investigat­ed by the FBI with assistance from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives and local police in South Florida.

Jay Weaver: 305-376-3446, @jayhweaver

Happy birthday, Tua Tagovailoa, who turned 25 on Thursday. The perfect gift from his team might have been the announceme­nt the fifthyear option on his contract was being picked up. Would have been a present worth $23.2 million. Guaranteed.

The gift was not forthcomin­g. He might still get it. Might not, too.

The Miami Dolphins have a quandary on the future of the young quarterbac­k. They want to show him love, and faith. But with that comes great risk. And the clock ticks ever louder toward a decision deadline of May 1.

Tagovailoa’s history of concussion­s is an obvious, spoken reason for the delay.

The not-spoken reason may be the X-factor: The possible availabili­ty of Lamar Jackson.

It’s been fun this week hearing

 ?? ?? The three men are scheduled for sentencing in late April before U.S. District Judge James Cohn.
The three men are scheduled for sentencing in late April before U.S. District Judge James Cohn.
 ?? KENNETH K. LAM TNS ?? Superstar dual-threat quarterbac­k Lamar Jackson and the Baltimore Ravens are at a contractua­l impasse.
KENNETH K. LAM TNS Superstar dual-threat quarterbac­k Lamar Jackson and the Baltimore Ravens are at a contractua­l impasse.

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