Man, 40, booked in robbery spree

Police booked a man Wednesday in a crime spree over the past two weeks, including the robberies at gunpoint of people in four vehicles.

Police arrested Dylan Alfred, 40, Wednesday morning after he grabbed a woman’s purse in the 4500 block of Johnston Street, according to a Lafayette Police Department news release.

The woman had just parked her vehicle and was getting out when a man asked her for the time, police said.

When she looked down, the man snatched her purse, pushed her to the ground and then fled in a silver van, according to police.

Officers tracked Alfred down a few hours later driving the van, which police said had been stolen at gunpoint Dec. 12 from a woman as she unloaded it on Foreman Drive, Lafayette Police spokesman Cpl. Paul Mouton said.

“When we stopped him today, he was in that van,” Mouton said.

The purse snatching Wednesday came after police had secured an arrest warrant for Alfred in a Dec. 15 incident at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette.

In that case, Alfred faces a count of attempted simple robbery in approaching a woman on campus and demanding her car keys, according to police.

Police said the woman was able to activate ULL’s emergency phone alert system, and the would-be robber fled.

Mouton said that in addition to the attempted simple robbery case, Alfred was booked Wednesday on one count of purse snatching in Wednesday’s incident, one count of illegal possession of stolen things and four counts of armed robbery.

One of the armed robbery charges is in connection with the stolen van and the others are related to three similar incidents this month in which Alfred allegedly stole a woman’s vehicle at gunpoint, the first one on Dec. 10, he said.

The three other vehicles have been recovered, Mouton said.


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Comments (2)


1) Comment by Costanza - 20/12/2012

Please, PLEASE put this dangerous thug away for a long time. There is no mention in the article, but does he have a criminal history?

2) Comment by tradewinns - 20/12/2012

this fellow is a poster child of the criminal element in La. so why doesn't the "justice system" make a poster child of him on what happens to criminals in La.? he should be given the very maximum sentence on each and every charge he has incurred in his crime spree and they should all be served consecutively. if he ends of with 100-200 years, great! that means there will be peace (where he is concerned) in society. who's next?