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Press Release
WASHINGTON – Rasdavid Lagarde, 28, of Washington, D.C., was sentenced today to a 28 ½-year prison term for a botched attempted armed robbery of two Howard University students in which one victim was killed, Acting U.S. Attorney Vincent H. Cohen, Jr. announced.
Lagarde pled guilty in February 2015, in the Superior Court of the District of Columbia, to second-degree murder while armed for the death of 22-year-old Omar Sykes and attempted armed robbery and possession of a firearm during a crime of violence for the attack on the surviving victim. He was sentenced by the Honorable Lynn Leibovitz. Upon completion of his prison term, Lagarde will be placed on five years of supervised release.
“Omar Sykes was a rising senior at Howard with a passion for serving others and a world of promise,” said Acting U.S. Attorney Cohen. “His murder impoverishes our entire community. This prison sentence ensures that Omar Sykes’s killer will spend decades behind bars for his embrace of senseless violence. This case should serve as a warning to all the young men in our city who are tempted to get something for nothing through armed robberies.”
According to the government’s evidence, on July 4, 2013, at about 11:20 p.m., Lagarde and an accomplice were in the 700 block of Fairmont Street NW. Mr. Sykes and another Howard University student were also on the block, walking ahead of them.
Lagarde’s accomplice pulled out a gun. He ran towards the student who was with Mr. Sykes, and ordered him to the ground. He struck the student in the head multiple times with the gun, hit him in the ribs, and kicked him. He then ordered the student multiple times not to look at him or Lagarde. At one point during the assault, Lagarde told the accomplice that he thought the student was looking at him. The accomplice then hit the student yet again.
During this attack, Lagarde pulled out a gun and approached Mr. Sykes to assist in the robbery. Lagarde’s accomplice ordered Mr. Sykes to the ground and tried to force him to the ground next to the other victim. As Lagarde attempted to pistol-whip Mr. Sykes, Lagarde fired his gun at Mr. Sykes. Mr. Sykes was shot by a single gunshot that traversed through his arm and into his chest. Lagarde and the accomplice then fled from Fairmont Street.
Mr. Sykes died from the gunshot wound. The other student suffered lacerations to his head, including a huge gash to his forehead that required multiple stitches to treat. He also suffered several bruised ribs.
Lagarde was arrested by the Metropolitan Police Department (MPD) on Oct. 15, 2013 for the murder of Mr. Sykes. He told detectives that the accomplice initiated the robbery. However, once the attempted robbery began, Lagarde helped with it. Lagarde admitted that he was armed with a .380 firearm, which he used during the robbery attempt. Lagarde stated that he did not intend for the gun to fire, but it did fire during a tussle with Mr. Sykes when he tried to force Mr. Sykes to the ground. No other arrests have been made in the case.
In announcing the sentence, Acting U.S. Attorney Cohen commended the work of the detectives of the Criminal Investigations Division Homicide Branch, crime scene officers, and the Third Police District of the Metropolitan Police Department, as well as Jacob Kunkle of the FBI’s Cellular Analysis Survey Team. He also expressed appreciation to those who worked on the case from the U.S. Attorney’s Office, including Marcia Rinker, James Brennan, M. Laverne Forrest, Debra Cannon, Lesley Slade, and Michael Hailey, all of the Victim/Witness Assistance Unit; Paralegal Specialist Vanessa Trent-Valentine; former Paralegal Specialists Fern Rhedrick and Marian Russell; Investigative Analyst Zachary McMenamin, Litigation Technology Specialist Jeanie Latimore-Brown, and Intern Abhi Mehta. He also praised the efforts of Assistant U.S. Attorneys Shana Fulton and Veronica Sanchez, who investigated, indicted and prosecuted the case.