ANOTHER TALE FROM BUSH'S AMERICA
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A 71-year-old man told police he robbed a Gainesville bank Tuesday to raise money to pay the medical bills of his wife, who drove the getaway car, reports said.
Gainesville Police said the plan started to unravel for James Roland Clark of Archer - who used a Halloween mask and fake bomb during the robbery - when he got outside the Compass Bank at 2201 NW 43rd St. and a dye pack planted in the money exploded, releasing a large pink cloud over him as he left the bank.
He left the scene of the 9:30 a.m. robbery in a 1992 white Pontiac Grand Am driven by his 66-year-old wife, Deloris Jane Clark, police said. The couple were captured shortly after driving west on NW 8th Avenue.
No one was injured during the robbery.
"(James) Clark said it was to pay for his wife's medical bills," Sgt. Keith Kameg said. "In fact, they were on the way to the doctor at 10 a.m."
Authorities declined to release any further information about Deloris Clark's medical condition.
The Clarks were being held at the Alachua County jail late Tuesday. Both are charged with armed bank robbery, police said. James Clark also faces a charge of threatening to discharge a destructive device.
Although his wife has no criminal history, James Clark has a "significant federal criminal history" dating back to 1954, Kameg said. Charges include bank robbery, mail fraud and conspiracy to grow and distribute marijuana, officers reported. He also had been sentenced in 1992 to 12 years in a federal prison on bank robbery charges.
GPD Detective Joe Senn said James Clark was the oldest bank robbery suspect he'd ever seen.
"The guy could be my grandfather," he said...
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