ALEXANDRIA, La. – Jon Michael Mauldwin, 28, was sentenced
today to 241 months in prison and five years of supervised release for a
federal carjacking and related firearms charge stemming from the kidnapping of
a Port Barre man, announced David C. Joseph, United States Attorney for the
Western District of Louisiana.
U.S. District Judge Dee D. Drell sentenced Mauldwin to 121
months for the federal carjacking charge, which will run concurrent to pending
state charges, and an additional, consecutive 10 years for using, carrying, or
possessing a firearm during and in relation to a crime of violence. Mauldwin
pled guilty to these charges in U.S. District Court in Alexandria on September
9, 2019.
The incident began in the early morning hours of August 20,
2017, at approximately 1:00 a.m., when Mauldwin crashed his vehicle at a
residence in Port Barre. Mauldwin exited the vehicle, had a brief encounter
with an individual at the residence, then re-entered his vehicle and drove down
the road where he wrecked for the second time. After the second crash, he
entered the home of a Port Barre man, brandishing a black handgun. Mauldwin
forced the victim out of his home at gunpoint demanding that the victim use his
own truck to drive him to a store. Along the way, Mauldwin told the victim he
was going to die and fired the gun in front of the victim’s face causing the
driver’s side window to shatter and causing hearing loss in the victim’s left
ear. When they arrived at a convenience store, the victim managed to get away
and get help. Mauldwin continued his crime spree in Point Coupee Parish where
he was subsequently arrested.
The FBI, ATF the St. Landry Parish Sheriff’s Office, Point
Coupee Sheriff’s Office and Livonia Police Department conducted the
investigation. Assistant U.S. Attorney Daniel J. McCoy prosecuted the case.
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