Pensioner who robbed bank to escape wife sentenced to house arrest

Authored by independent.co.uk and submitted by OvidPerl
image for Pensioner who robbed bank to escape wife sentenced to house arrest

A Kansas man who robbed a bank to get away from his wife has been sentenced to six months house arrest as his punishment due to his mental health.

Lawrence John Ripple, 70, walked into the Bank of Labor just down the street from police headquarters in Kansas City with a note demanding money and that he had a gun.

He had written the note at home in front of his wife after telling her he would "rather be in jail than at home," the Kansas City Star reported.

After the teller handed him nearly $3,000 in cash, Mr Ripple waited in the lobby for police to arrive.

Mr Ripple had multiple bypass heart surgery in 2015 and suffered from depression that, according to lawyers, went undiagnosed.

Prior to the robbery, he lived a normal, law-abiding life as a husband and stepfather to four children. His public defender called the robbery a "cry for help".

At the sentencing trial Mr Ripple said he had sought medical help for his mental health and said he "feel[s] like his old self".

Shape Created with Sketch. Criminals and their nicknames Show all 5 left Created with Sketch. right Created with Sketch. Shape Created with Sketch. Criminals and their nicknames 1/5 Criminals and their nicknames Alphone 'Scarface' Capone (AFP/Getty) AFP/Getty 2/5 Criminals and their nicknames Ilich Ramirez Sanchez, aka Carlos the Jackal (EPA) EPA 3/5 Criminals and their nicknames Ted Kaczynski, the Unabomber 4/5 Criminals and their nicknames Peter Sutcliffe, the Yorkshire Ripper (GEtty) Getty 5/5 Criminals and their nicknames Jihadi John AP 1/5 Criminals and their nicknames Alphone 'Scarface' Capone (AFP/Getty) AFP/Getty 2/5 Criminals and their nicknames Ilich Ramirez Sanchez, aka Carlos the Jackal (EPA) EPA 3/5 Criminals and their nicknames Ted Kaczynski, the Unabomber 4/5 Criminals and their nicknames Peter Sutcliffe, the Yorkshire Ripper (GEtty) Getty 5/5 Criminals and their nicknames Jihadi John AP

The vice president of the bank and the teller both supported a request for leniency for Mr Ripple given his mental health state. It is incredibly rare for someone who commits a bank robbery not to be sentenced to prison and Mr Ripple's sentence could have faced up to 37 months per local law.

He will also serve three years of supervised probation and must do 50 hours of community service. Mr Ripple was ordered to pay $227.27 to the bank, which represents the billable hours for bank employees sent home on the day of robbery. He is also required to give $100 to a crime victims fund.

greatgildersleeve on November 18th, 2018 at 22:54 UTC »

Violate home confinement. Get arrested. Go to jail. Get away from wife.

GldRush98 on November 18th, 2018 at 22:46 UTC »

And here I was thinking our criminal justice system was against cruel and unusual punishment.

WeirdEngineerDude on November 18th, 2018 at 22:38 UTC »

I'm sure his home life got WAAAAY better when he got home and explained why he was now confined to the home.