Sequim bank robber suspect trial set for July

Documents reveal details of April 9 incident, arrest

A trial for a Port Hadlock man charged with robbing Sequim’s Kitsap Bank, 1320 W. Washington St., is set to begin in July.

At an arraignment hearing on May 16 in Clallam County Superior Court, Dale Allen Jaff, 57, pleaded not guilty to the robbery through appointed defense attorney Alex Stalker.

Jaff faces three felony charges: robbery in the first degree, theft in the second degree, and assault in the second degree. He faces up to life in prison and a $50,000 fine for the robbery, up to five years in prison and a $5,000 fine for the theft charge, and up to 10 years in prison and a $10,000 fine for the assault.

Judge Brent Basden set the six-day trial to tentatively begin on July 7 with a status hearing scheduled for 1 p.m. June 13.

Sequim Police officers arrested Jaff at his home early in the morning on May 9 after using video surveillance and body cam footage to match him and his white 2010 white Chevrolet Silverado to the April 9 robbery.

Jaff was arrested one month after he allegedly dressed in black clothing, a blue surgical mask and sunglasses and went into the bank around 3:30 p.m. April 9 and demanded money from a teller, according to court documents.

Det. Sgt. Darrell Nelson with the Sequim Police Department wrote in his incident report that a teller asked the robber to remove his hood and sunglasses for the security camera and he refused. The robber then presented a note to the teller and showed a BB gun and stun gun to her.

The note stated:

“READ VERY CAREFULLY!!

YOU HAVE 90 SECONDS TO

PUT ALL OF THE MONEY

FROM ALL OF THE DRAWERS

INTO THE BAG!!

NO DYEPACKS

NO TRACKERS

NO SILENT ALARMS

STAY CALM AND MOVE QUICKLY

AND NOBODY GETS HURT!!

THE CLOCK IS TICKING!!!”

Police report that the robber handed the teller the note and then demanded she “Give me all the money out of the drawer – second drawer, too. No dye packs.”

He then gave her a black bag to use.

Before filling the bag with money, she hit the panic alarm, according to court documents.

The robber took somewhere between $3,000 and $4,000 and was in the bank about one minute and 11 seconds, Nelson reports.

Once the robber got the money, Nelson reported that the robber pointed a can of Oleoresin capsicum (bear defense spray) at the teller, who dropped to the ground fearing it was a gun, and he began spraying towards her and around him in many directions for about 20 seconds.

He then left and drove away.

Staff were bothered by the spray, police report, but there were no injuries during the robbery.

Sequim Police Department, Clallam County Sheriff’s Office deputies, and a Port Angeles Police Department canine officer searched the area but were unable to find the suspect that day.

Clallam County Fire District 3 staff used a fan to air out the bank.

Kitsap Bank officials closed the bank on April 10, offered counseling to staff, and reopened the branch on April 11.

Still images and a description of the robber were released by police on April 10.

Using an anonymous tip naming Jaff, and search warrants for video surveillance footage from the area, police report they connected Jaff to the robbery via video time stamps and identifiable stickers on his truck and its canopy seen driving by the bank and on U.S. Highway 101.

Video of Jaff at 7 Cedars Casino in his truck and wearing a similar hoodie from the robbery identified him on April 17, court documents state.

Nelson reports that they also matched him with his truck via body cam footage from a March 28 traffic stop by Port Townsend Police Department.

After Jaff’s arrest, Nelson reported that Jaff admitted to robbing the bank because he was behind on rent and going to be homeless if he did not pay back rent.

According to court documents, Jaff also told police he conducted reconnaissance on the bank a few days prior, owned the BB gun and stun gun presented at the bank, and sprayed bear spray to keep bank employees away from the windows so they would not see him walk to his truck.

Through a search warrant, police obtained from Jaff’s residence a BB gun, stun gun, bear defense spray, black fabric shopping bag and similar clothing used in the robbery, as well as several copies of demand letters similar to the one recovered from the bank.