PENNSYLVANIA
A Colombian national who was arrested in Colombia and extradited to Pittsburgh was sentenced Tuesday to 33 months in prison in federal court for his role in the Hobbs Act robbery of an employee of a New York business that sold jewelry and gemstones, according to officials.
Oscar Javier Rodriguez Roa, 36, of Bogota, Columbia, was sentenced to 33 months.
U.S. District Court Judge Donetta W. Ambrose ordered Roa to be deported from the United States following the completion of his prison sentence, Judge Ambrose did not order Roa to serve a term of supervised release
According to the plea agreement, Roa, a national and citizen of Colombia who previously resided in Atlanta, Georgia and Harris County, Texas, was a member of a South American theft ring that targeted traveling jewelry salesmen in the United States and elsewhere.
On or about May 5, 2013, Roa and several accomplices drove from Lawrenceville, Georgia to Western Pennsylvania in a rented, grey-colored Nissan Maxima.
On May 8, 2013, in Wexford, Pennsylvania, Roa, and three accomplices approached a traveling jewelry salesman from New York City as the salesman exited his car in the parking lot of a Wexford jewelry store.
Roa smashed the rear driver’s side window of the salesman’s car with a garden tool, reached inside the car, and stole a black shoulder bag containing approximately $500,000 worth of gemstones and jewelry.
One accomplice punctured the rear driver’s side tire of the salesman’s car, a second accomplice kept an eye on the salesman, and the third accomplice drove the Nissan Maxima getaway car.
Prior to the robbery, the accomplices obscured the Maxima’s license plate using a vanity plate.
Witnesses to the robbery followed the Nissan Maxima to a church parking lot.
After realizing they had been followed, Roa and his accomplices drove to nearby muffler shop where they abandoned the Nissan Maxima and fled on foot to a nearby CVS pharmacy.
CVS pharmacy video surveillance, obtained by law enforcement, showed Oscar Javier Rodriguez Roa and one accomplice entering the store while the two remaining accomplices waited outside.
Roa was seen talking on a cell phone as he entered the store, while Roa’s accomplice was seen carrying the black shoulder bag containing the gemstones and jewelry.
Forensic analysis revealed Roa’s fingerprints on the front passenger door of the Nissan Maxima and on a video game console found in the trunk of the car.
Records from Customs and Border Protection showed that Roa, who is not a citizen of the United States, fled the United States on May 16, 2013, by boarding a flight in Houston, Texas, destined for Bogota, Columbia.
DOJ NOTED:
The investigation of this case was led by the FBI’s Pittsburgh Field Division, with the assistance of the Northern Regional Police Department. The Justice Department’s Office of International Affairs provided significant support in securing the defendant’s extradition.
Trial Attorney Leshia Lee-Dixon of the Criminal Division’s Organized Crime and Gang Section and Assistant U.S. Attorney Charles A. Eberle of the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Western District of Pennsylvania prosecuted the case.