truesee's Blog

Pentagon spends billions to fight roadside bombs, with little success

Pentagon spends billions to fight roadside bombs, with little success

 

Peter Cary and Nancy A. Youssef | Center for Public Integrity and McClatchy Newspapers

 

March 27, 2011 12:53:30 AM

 

WASHINGTON — In February 2006, with roadside bombs killing more and more American soldiers in Iraq, the Pentagon created an agency to defeat the deadly threat and tasked a retired four-star general to run it.

Five years later, the agency has ballooned into a 1,900-employee behemoth and has spent nearly $17 billion on hundreds of initiatives. Yet the technologies it's developed have failed to significantly improve U.S. soldiers' ability to detect unexploded roadside bombs and have never been able to find them at long distances. Indeed, the best detectors remain the low-tech methods: trained dogs, local handlers and soldiers themselves.

A review by the Center for Public Integrity and McClatchy of government reports and interviews with auditors, investigators and congressional staffers show that the agency — the Joint Improvised Explosive Device Defeat Organization — also violated its own accounting rules and hasn't properly evaluated its initiatives to keep mistakes from being repeated.

Meanwhile, roadside bombs remain the single worst killer of soldiers as more U.S. forces have been transferred out of Iraq and into Afghanistan. Known in military parlance as improvised explosive devices, the crude, often-homemade bombs killed 368 coalition troops in Afghanistan last year, by far the highest annual total since 2001, when the U.S.-led war there began, according to icasualties.org, which tracks military casualties in the Afghanistan and Iraq wars.

Among the serious questions about how well JIEDDO has spent its billions:

  • The agency failed to collect data on its projects, leading a congressional investigative subcommittee to conclude in 2008, "The nation does not yet know if JIEDDO is winning the (counter-IED) fight."
  • Some of its spending went to programs that had little to do with its core mission, including $400 million for Army force protection in 2010 and $24.6 million to hire private contractors for intelligence operations in Afghanistan.

 

  • Agency officials misreported some $795 million in costs, the Government Accountability Office said, circumventing its own rules requiring high-level Defense Department approval for projects with price tags greater than $25 million.

 

  • JIEDDO's staff comprises six contractors for every government employee, a ratio that its outgoing director acknowledged needs to be reduced.

 

  • While the agency was mandated to "lead, advocate (and) coordinate" anti-roadside bomb initiatives, more than 100 groups and initiatives inside and outside the Defense Department continue "to develop, maintain and in many cases expand" their own work, the GAO found.

 

Rep. Duncan D. Hunter, R-Calif., a former Marine and an Iraq and Afghanistan veteran, said the Pentagon and its anti-IED agencies, including JIEDDO, could do far better in preventing casualties from roadside bombs.

"So as long as the IED metric keeps going up, and as long as we keep taking the majority of our KIA (killed in action) casualties from IEDs, then they've all been unsuccessful. Period," he said.

One U.S. soldier who was based in Baghdad in 2008 said: "We were out there every day. We studied our destroyed vehicles, and (the enemy's IED tactics) kept changing. So we kept trying new ideas, anything, to stop them. JIEDDO didn't help us." The soldier declined to be identified because of the sensitivity of the matter.

Lt. Gen. Michael Oates, who recently stepped down as the agency's director, its third in five years, acknowledged missteps but said they were inevitable because the agency was tasked with producing devices quickly.

"We fund things," Oates said. "Sometimes we fund things that don't work. Some call that waste; I call it risk."

One of the things that apparently didn't work was the Joint IED Neutralizer, created in 2002 by an Arizona start-up called Ionatron. Looking like a pair of boxy golf carts, the JIN fired ultra-short pulse lasers followed by a half-million-volt lightning bolt of electricity, and its makers said it could detonate the blasting caps that triggered IEDs from well outside blast range.

In 2005, then-Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz authorized $30 million for the JIN despite skepticism from scientists, who said damp ground or dust would render the device useless. During test runs in Afghanistan in 2006, the JIN was disappointing: It had trouble climbing steep mountain terrain and experienced safety problems, continuing to shoot lightning bolts after its switch was turned off.

After the JIN received some publicity, an insurgent website published ways to defeat it. The test vehicles were shipped back to the United States.

In mid-2006, shareholders filed two class-action suits against the JIN's makers, alleging that the firm had concealed the fact that the vehicle wasn't capable of meeting government specifications. The company, which had changed its name to Applied Energetics Inc., denied the claims but settled the suit in September 2009 by paying $5.3 million in cash and another $1.2 million in stock to the complaining shareholders. The firm didn't respond to repeated requests for comment.

Still, the project wouldn't die. With a $400,000 earmark from Sen. Thad Cochran, R-Miss., and $1.5 million more from JIEDDO, the Marine Corps hung the JIN on the front of a mine roller. A slide from a May 2009 Marine Corps briefing shows a device attached to mine rollers shooting a bolt of electricity into the ground.

"People have been trying to use a Tesla coil" — a transformer that can produce very high-voltage discharges — "for years to defeat mines. It has never worked," said Dan Goure, a former defense official who's a vice president at the Lexington Institute, a Washington-area research center.

 

The devices JIEDDO designed to detect roadside bombs at a distance didn't work out, Goure said. They included airplane- or drone-based radars, long-range radars to sniff out buried control wires, and detectors to sense explosive ingredients such as ammonium nitrate fertilizer.

Other projects that were started but abandoned include: Alexis and Electra-C, which emitted waves to detonate IEDs but interfered with jammers; an unmanned Humvee called Forerunner that soldiers said "induced operator vertigo" and was hard to control, according to a JIEDDO report; and a high-powered microwave emitter called BlowTorch that was designed to defeat heat-triggered IEDs but which insurgents figured out how to overcome.

"We were throwing new technologies into this like fast-food orders at a diner," Goure said.

JIEDDO officials said the agency quickly terminated programs that weren't promising. But the GAO and some congressional staffers countered that the agency has never been good at choosing or steering its projects.

"It's been a weakness from the beginning. They don't have good controls over start-ups," said Bill Solis, the director of defense capabilities and management at the GAO, which has authored several studies on the agency.

JIEDDO spent more than $3 billion on jammers to thwart radio-controlled IEDs, which most say was a good idea. It bought mine rollers to attach to the fronts of vehicles. However, critics note that what many consider the most successful anti-roadside bomb program was only marginally funded by JIEDDO: the Mine-Resistant Ambush Protected vehicle, now operating mainly in Afghanistan. While JIEDDO purchased the first 250 MRAPs, designed to withstand roadside bombs, it was a separate MRAP task force that bought more than 22,000 of them for $36 billion.

Oates, the agency's former director, has said the "greatest return on the dollar" has been training soldiers to detect and respond to roadside bomb attacks.

The GAO noted that the agency spent $70.7 million from 2007 to 2009 on "role-players in an effort to simulate Iraqi social, political and religious groups" at Pentagon training centers.

At one training site, the agency spent $24.1 million to make steel shipping containers resemble Iraqi buildings.

"I just couldn't believe it," said a former congressional staffer, who spoke only on the condition of anonymity because of a lack of authority to speak publicly.

The agency's new director, Lt. Gen Michael Barbero, took over earlier this month fresh off a tour in Iraq. Among his tasks will be collecting data on what works and what doesn't, and improving relations with Congress, which had complained in the past about a lack of information to evaluate the agency's performance.

In debate over the 2010 Pentagon budget, for instance, the House Armed Services Committee threatened to withhold half the agency's money "until the committee is provided JIEDDO's detailed budget and program information."

Few in Congress wanted to be seen giving short shrift to the fight against roadside bombs, however. Year after year, the agency has received the federal funding it requested, to the tune of $20.8 billion over six years.

Roadside bomb attacks continue to increase in Afghanistan, averaging roughly 1,500 per month at the end of last year. The number of U.S. troops wounded by IEDs skyrocketed to 3,366 in 2010, compared with 2,386 during the previous nine years combined, according to data JIEDDO collected.

Despite years of effort, soldiers have long had only a 50-50 success rate in detecting bombs before they explode. That ticked up to 60 percent in Afghanistan in recent months, Oates said — thanks largely to better local intelligence and aerial surveillance as well as on-the-ground technology — but it's too soon to tell whether this marks a long-term trend.

The agency's future is unclear. While some of Oates' predecessors argued that the agency should be a permanent part of the Pentagon because the fight against roadside bombs is global and ongoing, some in Congress have argued that it should be terminated at the end of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Oates, for his part, said that JIEDDO "is not a permanent organization, and we do not seek to be one."

(This article was reported and written by Peter Cary of the Center for Public Integrity and Nancy A. Youssef of McClatchy. Shashank Bengali of McClatchy contributed. The center is a nonprofit investigative journalism organization based in Washington. Cary is a freelance writer who formerly headed the investigative reporting team at U.S. News & World Report.)

Entry #4,229

Golf Carts Used To Steal ATM's

Stolen golf carts used for Fresno ATM heists

 02:28 PM on Thursday, Mar. 24, 2011

Jim Guy / The Fresno
 

 

 
 
 
Wanted: a pair of thieves who make off with money machines in stolen golf carts. So far, four ATMs in the Fresno area have been hit, and police think the same crooks are responsible.

The latest incident happened early Monday at Fig Garden Golf Club on the 7700 block of North Van Ness Boulevard. Sheriff's spokesman Chris Curtice said a person arriving for work at the golf club heard an alarm and then saw the thieves fleeing down a fairway in a golf cart.

Deputies later discovered that the two had used an all-terrain vehicle to pull the top off the ATM. The suspects fled before they could get any cash.

Fresno police also are on the trail. On March 7, two men stole an ATM from Blackbeard's entertainment center on the 4000 block of North Chestnut Avenue, Sgt. Mark Hudson said. The thieves apparently made off with the machine in a golf cart taken from Fort Washington Golf Course on the 10000 block of North Millbrook Avenue on Feb. 23, while thieves were stealing an ATM there.

The first ATM heist took place on New Year's Day, when thieves used a pickup to smash the windows of the Fast and Easy convenience store on the 6400 block of East Shields Avenue. They tied a tow strap to the ATM and dragged it out of the store, then loaded it into the truck bed.

 

 



lINK TO VIDEO: http://www.fresnobee.com/2011/03/24/2322915/fresno-thieves-steal-atms-using.html#storylink=mirelated#ixzz1HnkyXuBb
Entry #4,228

Why liberals hate Clarence Thomas and Sarah Palin

Star Parker: Why liberals hate Clarence Thomas and Sarah Palin

 

Star Parker
03/26/11 8:05 PM
Examiner Columnist
 
In the days when slavery was legal in this country, all slaves did not willingly resign to the grim fate cast upon them.

The human spirit longs to be free. In some individuals, that longing beats so strong in their breasts that they will take large personal risks, against great odds, to rebel against tyranny that has transformed their lives into a tool for someone else's will and whim.

Slaves who had the temerity to run away from their plantation "home" paid dearly if they were caught and returned. Measures were taken to make them an example to others who might harbor similar thoughts about freedom.

Among those measures were brutal public beatings of rebels to which other slaves were forced to bear witness and digest with great clarity the price of rebelliousness.

Such is the fate today of those uppity souls who choose to challenge the authority and legitimacy of our inexorably growing government plantation.

Those with interests for the care and feeding of this plantation cannot physically punish these rebels with the whip.

Their whip is the mainstream media and the means of punishment of this virtual whip is not beating of a physical body but assassination of character.

This perspective helps us understand the ongoing liberal obsession with destroying Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas and former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin.

Thomas and Palin are particularly threatening to liberals because their lives fly in the face of liberal mythology. According to this mythology, the essential and ongoing struggle in our nation is a power struggle of interests between "haves" and "have-nots," rather than an ongoing struggle for human freedom.

According to this mythology, there is an elite class of "haves" who, by virtue of fate and birth, control power and wealth. They are conservative because their only interest is to keep things as they are.

Fighting against this conservative elite are noble "have-nots," struggling, by any means possible, to get their fair share and against wealth distributed by an unjust and blind fate.

A high-profile conservative, whose very life and personal history poses an open challenge and affront to this mythology, is a liberal's worst nightmare.

If being a conservative means simply protecting the bounty passed on to you by your forebears, why would a man from a poor black family in the South, or a woman from a white working-class family in Alaska, be a conservative? No less a conservative whose conservatism plays a role in a successful professional life?

The liberal answer is that the only way this could be possible is that this is an individual of dubious character, on the take, and being paid off handsomely by conservative powers that be.

After all, in the liberal mind-set, the government plantation, carefully grown and nurtured by liberals over these years, supposedly on behalf of our unfortunate "have-nots," should be the natural home for anyone of modest background and no inheritance.

Not only should that individual want to live on the plantation, but you'd think they would want to participate in the noble cause of keeping it growing.

The federal government plantation now sucks out one quarter of our economy. Seventy percent of federal spending now amounts to checks government cuts and mails to individuals.

Where does it all lead? Look at Detroit. This is a government plantation poster child and portent of our nation's future if this keeps up.

The human spirit does long to be free. Many understand this but are intimidated to speak up. Some are brave and do speak up.

Those who are successful, who know there is no future on the plantation, will be publicly flogged by the overseers. Such is the case of Justice Thomas and Mrs. Palin.

But it is brave individuals like this, in public and private life, upon whom our future depends.

Examiner Columnist Star Parker is an author, and president of the Coalition for Urban Renewal and Education



Read more at the Washington Examiner: http://washingtonexaminer.com/opinion/columnists/2011/03/star-parker-why-liberals-hate-clarence-thomas-and-sarah-palin#ixzz1HlH6jW00
Entry #4,227

Convict tells jury he wants to kill them

Saturday, 26 March 2011 10:30AM

Jefferson Parish jury sentences man to death



A Jefferson Parish jury has sentenced 28-year-old Isaiah Doyle to death.

It was a unanimous verdict in the parish's first capital murder trial in six years.

Doyle was convicted on Thursday of murdering a convenience store clerk during a 2005 robbery.

The trial was marked by violent outbursts from Doyle, who said from the stand that he felt no remorse for his actions.

"I have no conscience. When I go to sleep at night, I don't even think about it," said Doyle.

Doyle said in court that he would have shot the victim Hwa Lee more than four times if his gun hadn't jammed.

Doyle even threatened the jurors, saying, "If I had an AK-47, I'd kill every last one of y'all with no remorse."

The unanimous verdict was required by state law in order for Doyle to receive the death sentence.

Jurors also had to agree he does not have mental retardation; otherwise, he would have automatically received a life sentence.

Doyle's defense attorneys did not contest that Doyle was the shooter.

Instead, they centered their defense on his mental health, saying he was not guilty because he is mentally retarded.
 
 
LINK TO VIDEO:
 
Entry #4,226

Geraldine Ferraro First Female VP Candidate Dies at 75

First female VP candidate Ferraro dies at 75

FILE - This Tuesday, Aug. 21, 1984 file picture shows Geraldine Ferraro at a news conference in New York. A spokesperson said Saturday, March 26, 2011 that Ferraro, the first woman to run for vice president, has died at 75. FILE - This Tuesday, Aug. 21, 1984 file picture shows Geraldine Ferraro at a news conference in New York. A spokesperson said Saturday, March 26, 2011 that Ferraro, the first woman to run for vice president, has died at 75. (AP Photo/Suzanne Vlamis, File)
 
Beth Fouhy and Jay Lindsay Associated Press / March 26, 2011
 
BOSTON—Geraldine Ferraro, who in 1984 became the first woman to run for vice president on a major party ticket, only to lose in a landslide, died Saturday. She was 75.

Ferraro died at Massachusetts General Hospital, where she was being treated for blood cancer. She died just before 10 a.m., said Amanda Fuchs Miller, a family friend who worked for Ferraro in her 1998 Senate bid and was acting as a spokeswoman for the family.

An obscure Queens congresswoman, Ferraro catapulted to national prominence at the 1984 Democratic convention when she was chosen by presidential nominee Walter Mondale to join his ticket against incumbents Ronald Reagan and George H. W. Bush.

Delegates in San Francisco erupted in cheers at the first line of her speech accepting the vice-presidential nomination.

"My name is Geraldine Ferraro," she declared. "I stand before you to proclaim tonight: America is the land where dreams can come true for all of us."

Her acceptance speech launched eight minutes of cheers, foot-stamping and tears.

Ferraro sometimes overshadowed Mondale on the campaign trail, often drawing larger crowds and more media attention than the presidential candidate.

"No one asks anymore if women can raise the money, if women can take the heat, if women have the stamina for the toughest political campaigns in this country," Judy Goldsmith, then-president of the National Organization for Women told People Magazine in December, 1984. "Geraldine Ferraro did them all."

But controversy accompanied her acclaim. Frequent, vociferous protests of her favorable view of abortion rights marked the campaign.

Ferraro's run also was beset by ethical questions, first about her campaign finances and tax returns, then about the business dealings of her husband, John Zaccaro. Ferraro attributed much of the controversy to bias against Italian-Americans.

Mondale said he selected Ferraro as a bold stroke to counter his poor showing in polls against President Reagan and because he felt America lagged far behind other democracies in elevating women to top leadership roles.

"The time had come to eliminate the barriers to women of America and to reap the benefits of drawing talents from all Americans, including women," Mondale said.

In the end, Reagan won 49 of the 50 states, the largest landslide since Franklin D. Roosevelt's first re-election, in 1936 over Alf Landon.

In the years after the race, Ferraro told interviewers that she would have not have accepted the nomination had she known how it would focus criticism on her family.

"You don't deliberately submit people you love to something like that," she told presidential historian Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr. in an interview in Ladies Home Journal. "I don't think I'd run again for vice-president," she said, then paused, laughed and said, "Next time I'd run for president."

Zaccaro pleaded guilty in 1985 to a misdemeanor charge of scheming to defraud in connection with obtaining financing for the purchase of five apartment buildings. Two years later he was acquitted of trying to extort a bribe from a cable television company.

Ferraro's son, John Zaccaro Jr., was convicted in 1988 of selling cocaine to an undercover Vermont state trooper and served three months under house arrest.

Some observers said the legal troubles were a drag on Ferraro's later political ambitions, which included her unsuccessful bids for the Democratic nomination for U.S. Senate in New York in 1992 and 1998.

Ferraro, a supporter of Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, was back in the news in March 2008 when she stirred up a controversy by appearing to suggest that Sen. Barack Obama achieved his status in the presidential race only because he's black.

She later stepped down from an honorary post in the Clinton campaign, but insisted she meant no slight against Obama.

Ferraro received a law degree from Fordham University in 1960, the same year she married Zaccaro and became a full-time homemaker and mother. She said she kept her maiden name to honor her mother, a widow who had worked long hours as a seamstress.

After years in a private law practice, she took a job as an assistant Queens district attorney in 1974. She headed the office's special victims' bureau, which prosecuted sex crimes and the abuse of children and the elderly. In 1978, she won the first of three terms in Congress representing a blue-collar district of Queens.

After losing in 1984, she became a fellow of the Institute of Politics at the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University until an unsuccessful bid for the U.S. Senate nomination in 1992.

She returned to the law after her 1992 Senate run, acting as an advocate for women raped during ethnic conflict in the former Yugoslavia.

Her advocacy work and support of President Bill Clinton won her the position of ambassador to the United Nations Human Rights Commission, where she served in 1994 and 1995.

She co-hosted CNN's "Crossfire," in 1996 and 1997 but left to take on Chuck Schumer, then a little-known Brooklyn congressman, in the 1998 Democratic Senate primary. She placed a distant second, declaring her political career finished after she took 26 percent of the vote to Schumer's 51 percent.

In June 1999, she announced that she was joining a Washington, D.C., area public relations firm to head a group advising clients on women's issues.

Ferraro revealed two years later that she had been diagnosed with blood cancer. She discussed blood cancer research before a Senate panel that month and said she hoped to live long enough "to attend the inauguration of the first woman president of the United States."

Entry #4,224

Mother accused of training 11-year-old boy to be pickpocket

Mother accused of training 11-year-old Bronx boy to be pickpocket worried about son's reputation

Melissa Grace
DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER

Friday, March 25th 2011, 4:12 PM

Carolyn Taylor yells at photographers as she leaves Manhattan Criminal Court Friday.
 
Siegel for News
Carolyn Taylor yells at photographers as she leaves Manhattan Criminal Court Friday.
 
Taylor is accused of having her 11 year old son help her steal a wallet from a baby stroller.
 
Mece for News
Taylor is accused of having her 11 year old son help her steal a wallet from a baby stroller.

She allegedly turned her 11-year-old son into a thief - and now she's worried about his reputation.

A Bronx woman went nuts Friday when photographers took her picture, suggesting it would look bad for the boy at school.

Carolyn Taylor, 35, is charged with making the child filch a wallet from a baby stroller at a Gap Kids on the upper West Side.

Wearing tight jeans a high-heeled suede boots, Taylor yelled at members of the media who were photographing her as she left a Manhattan court.

"You can't do this," she ranted.

"All you gotta do is my kid's school see this.

"Next time I'm coming back here with a thousand Muslims and kick your ass," she continued.

Throwing a beige scarf over her shoulder, she stormed down a hallway - her two male companions keeping their distance.

Taylor's lawyer, Henry Weil, said he wasn't sure what she meant by the last statement.

He said charges against the boy are being dropped, but prosecutors plans to present their case against Taylor to a grand jury Wednesday.

Taylor, who is out on $5,000 bail, was charged with possessing stolen property and endangering the welfare of a child for orchestrating the Jan. 15 theft, officials said.

Taylor's rap sheet has 11 arrests since 1993 on charges ranging from petty larceny to stolen property.

The Gap swipe was caught on videotape, and Taylor and her son were also taped using the victim's credit card at a drug store - where they also shoplifted.

In the drugstore video, Taylor appears to be directing her boy on what to steal and stuffing stolen merchandise in her bag.

Entry #4,221

Woman uses sister's ID to avoid jail still arrested because...

ID swap doesn't save sister from jail

Elizabeth Piazza
The Daily Times
03/25/2011 01:00:00 AM MDT

 

FARMINGTON — A Farmington woman who used her sister's identity to avoid going to jail found herself behind bars anyway because her sister also was wanted by the police.

Tashena Begay, 27, in an effort to evade arrest during a November 2010 traffic stop, provided the traffic officer with her sister's information, including her date of birth. The woman had an April 2009 active warrant out for a failure to appear in court.

But her plan backfired.

Little did Begay know that her sister, Brittany Kee, also had a warrant out for her arrest for a failure to appear.

"I was trying to avoid going to jail," Begay said in court Thursday of why she used her sister's identity.

Kee, on the night Begay was stopped by Sheriff's Deputy Jeremy Yazzie, had an active warrant because she failed to appear in court for several traffic citations.

"The joke was on you," Magistrate Judge Carla Vescovi-Dial said in court Thursday.

Yazzie arrested Begay on the warrant and also charged her with child restraints, driving on a suspended license and concealing identity. Begay initially gave the deputy the wrong social security number when she was pretending to be Kee and she had three children in the car who were not properly restrained, according to court records.

Three months later, in February, Kee was surprised when she was arrested for failing to appear in court to deal with the November citations, which were actually issued to Begay.

Kee reported the incident to deputies, who investigated the case.

Deputies contacted Begay, who told police the night she was stopped by Yazzie, she contacted her sister by phone and Kee gave her permission to use her name, according to court records.

Records from the San Juan County Adult Detention Center indicated Begay had signed Kee's name six times, according to court records.

The charges against Kee were dismissed and a new warrant was issued in Begay's name.

Begay pleaded guilty Thursday to attempted forgery and driving while on a suspended or revoked license, for which she received two years of supervised probation.

Entry #4,219

Bank robber, 70, caught holding up bank day after his release from jail

70-year-old bank robber caught holding up bank day after his release from jail heads back to prison

 

Scott Shifrel
DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER

Thursday, March 24th 2011, 6:10 PM

John Stolarz, pictured in 1988, pleaded guilty to bank robbery for his attempted October hold-up.
 
Salt Lake County Sherriff's Office
John Stolarz, pictured in 1988, pleaded guilty to bank robbery for his attempted October hold-up.
 
The geriatric bank robber caught sticking up a busy Manhattan bank a day after getting out of jail will be heading back to prison soon.

John Stolarz, 70, who has spent the better part of his adult life behind bars, will likely spend the better part of his golden years there as well.

Stolarz pleaded guilty to the top count of bank robbery, according to court papers made public yesterday.

The career criminal was shot in the leg just after his brazen attempt to hold up a Chase branch near Madison Square Garden on Oct. 14 - a day after finishing a 22-year-stint in a federal prison.

Banks were the favorite target of Stolarz, known as "Johnny Shades" for the slick tinted sunglasses he donned for a heist.

He once admitted to the FBI he had robbed so many in one three-month stretch he lost count.

On Wednesday, Stolarz pleaded guilty before Federal Magistrate James Francis.

He is slated to be sentenced in June

Entry #4,215