A D.C. man was sentenced to three and a half years in prison on Friday for a series of violent robberies of Maryland businesses, according to the United States Attorney’s Office (USAO) for the District of Columbia.
In February, Glenn Dolford, 32, pled guilty to two counts of interstate commerce interference by threat or violence. Following his sentencing, he was ordered to spend three years of supervised release.
According to the USAO, the sentence will be added to the more than 22 years he must serve for a deadly shooting on Super Bowl Sunday in February 2020 that killed one man and injured two more.
According to court filings, Dolford faces accusations stemming from robberies in June 2020, when he and three co-conspirators drove from Washington, D.C., to a CVS Pharmacy in Nottingham, Maryland. Dolford and two others assaulted an employee during a heist.
During the robbery, the employee attempted to flee, but Dolford caught up with him, pushed him to the floor, hit him in the head, and kept him down with his foot on his back. According to the USAO, over $1,000 in hydrocodone and employee goods was stolen.
According to court filings, the conspirators traveled from Washington, D.C., to a T-Mobile store in College Park the next day, forcing staff to the rear of the store and threatening to murder them if they did not turn over all of the equipment. The guys left with $20,000 in phones.
According to the USAO, Dolford was driving a rented silver Volkswagen Jetta from Enterprise Rent-a-Car on May 28, 2020, which links him to the crime.
Dolford was charged in June 2023 on conspiracy and Hobbs Act robbery charges related to the two occurrences.
According to the USAO, Dolford’s co-conspirators were both sentenced, with Floyd Neal, 32, serving over 13 years and Ashawntea Henderson, 32, serving over 4 years.
The FBI Washington Field Office’s Violent Crimes Task Force, as well as the Metropolitan Police Department and Prince George’s County Police Department, investigated the incident.