Sandeep Kaur, a professional California nurse, admitted that she is the woman the FBI dubbed "The Bombshell Bandit" after robberies last year in which a well-dressed woman approached bank tellers and threatened to detonate a bomb if they did not hand over cash from their registers.
Kaur, who escaped longer prison terms, derives her nickname of "Bombshell Bandit" from the bomb threats she made during the robberies, according to the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
Kaur escaped with USD 21,200 from her first robbery at a Bank of the West branch in Valencia, California, on June 6 last year, the most success she had at any of the four robberies she pleaded guilty to.
In subsequent robberies, she grabbed USD 1,978 and USD 8,000 at banks in Lake Havasu City in Arizona, and San Diego, respectively, before her strike on a St George bank which led to her capture in July, eight weeks after her crime spree began.
Defense attorney Jay Winward asked the court for an even lighter sentence of four years in prison, citing the challenges of Kaur's upbringing.
"She is educated, she has great worth to society ... And she does want to make amends," Winward said.
District Judge Ted Stewart shed some light on the closed discussions when he noted that Kaur had gone into debt with "a loan shark" and robbed banks to repay him.
Winward said Kaur was sent to India, but later returned to the United States. Stewart noted that Kaur graduated from high school at the age of 15 and nursing school at 19 and had no prior criminal history before the robberies.
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