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Infamous Kansas City Chiefs Superfan Xaviar Babudar was sentenced to an Oklahoma courtroom on Monday to 32 years in prison, 2 and a half years after the authorities captured him in the state while fleeing from a robbery in the local bank.
Babudar, known as Chiefsaholic, is already serving a federal sentence of 17 and a half years for having robbed banks in seven states from 2022 to 2023. But the office of the District Prosecutor of the County of Tulsa wanted it to serve more time and was looking for an life imprisonment sentence for the thirty year old. His sentence is simultaneous, which means that he will serve another 14 and a half years in an Oklahoma penitentiary after the end of his mandate.
“It was offensive to me,” said the district prosecutor of the county of Tulsa Steve Kunzweiler, “that a serial thief could victimize as many laborious Americans as this boy did throughout the country and received only 17 and a half years from the federal government.
“My preference was for him to serve the rest of his life in prison. He took another break today, but at least he will have served a little more time, and my thoughts are with the victims who continue to be tormented by his violence.”
In March, Babudar declared himself guilty in Oklahoma for robbery with a firearm, assault while masked or masked and removing an electronic monitoring device in relation to a December 16, 2022, armed robbery of the Tulsa Teachers Credit Union.
Babudar lawyers, Brett and Jay-Michael Swab, expressed relief in the condemnation decision. “[The prosecution] I wanted to die in prison, “said Jay-Michael Swab.
“Our whole position from the beginning is that we want to live in a world where everyone is treated in the same way, not based on notoriety or presence on social media.”
He said that his client’s madness was fueled by a game addiction and troubled childhood that left him homeless. Swab said Babudar is remorse and found Jesus during his imprisonment.
In December 2022, on a course towards a game of chiefs against the Houston TexaniBabudar stopped in Bixby, Oklahoma, and aimed at a black CO2 gun against a bank cashier at the credit union before escaping with $ 150,000. It was captured shortly after and in February 2023 it was released in bond. A month later – after receiving $ 100,000 in winnings from two bets on Chiefs – he removed his GPS device and went on the run.
After robbing Banks in Sparks, Nevada and El Dorado Hills, California, Babudar was captured by the FBI in California in July 2023. He was accused of a series of robberies previously unresolved throughout the Midwest and Tennessee.
In 2024, Babudar participated in a plea bargain in the western district of the Missouri Federal Court and admitted that he had stolen more than $ 800,000 in 11 robberies in seven states and recycling the proceeds through casinos.
Despite his request to be hosted in a federal prison in Illinois, Babudar, according to the courts of the court, was sent to a super-maximous security prison in Colorado known as “Alcatraz of the rocky mountains”. He was in the County Prison of Tulsa pending judicial proceedings since January.
Before his arrest, Babudar was one of Kansas City’s most popular superfans. Dressed with a gray wolf suit, he turned mad games, robbed the photos with children and forged a strong presence on social media built on a person of a generous and generous bachelor.
Jay-Michael Swab said that Babudar did not deserve an life imprisonment or further penalties, because he had never intended to hurt anyone and did not use a “real firearm”. Others in Oklahoma did not agree. Frank Frasier, a lawyer from Tulsa who represents the former cashier of Banca Payton Garcia, said that his client had to leave his job at the Tulsa Teachers Credit Union due to the trauma of that day. Frasier claimed to feel strongly that Babudar should be punished at the maximum extension of the law.
Brett Swab said that his client is taking responsibility for the shares and will take “every road” to improve himself and in the end to become a productive member of the company.
“No single or multiple series calls him a person,” he said.
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