Police put sting on familiar face
Marisa O’Neil
Costa Mesa Police had a reunion of sorts on Wednesday night when they
arrested a man previously convicted of a series of liquor store
robberies in Costa Mesa and Huntington Beach.
He was outside a liquor store when they took him into custody
Wednesday.
Officers recognized Newport Beach resident Michael Wade Dunkovich,
also known as the “Yellow Jacket Bandit,” as he pulled into a parking
lot at the corner of Adams Avenue and Harbor Boulevard. He was wanted
in connection with a series of robberies in Costa Mesa, Huntington
Beach and Westminster, starting on May 15, Lt. John FitzPatrick said.
In 2001, the 35-year-old Dunkovich was sentenced to three years in
prison for a series of gas station robberies in the same cities,
including one at Baker Street and Fairview Avenue.
“He was sentenced to three years and got out after two,”
FitzPatrick said. “He got out in February of this year, then in early
May started committing [more] robberies.”
A detective on the original case, now a sergeant, heard about the
latest spate of robberies and decided to track Dunkovich down,
FitzPatrick said. He got a description of Dunkovich’s vehicle and
spotted it on Wednesday night.
The marked police car followed Dunkovich as he pulled his car into
the parking lot of the liquor store.
“He pulled into the liquor store and the sergeant pulled in behind
him,” FitzPatrick said. “He saw [Dunkovich] preparing to rob the
store -- he got out of the car and pulled his shirt over his face. He
didn’t even see [the sergeant] behind him.”
Dunkovich was taken into custody without incident and booked on
suspicion of robbery and a parole violation. He is being held without
bail. Police believe he is responsible for as many as 11 recent
robberies.
He earned the name “Yellow Jacket Bandit” because he wore or
carried a yellow denim jacket during the robberies that occurred in
2000. He targeted liquor stores, pulling his T-shirt over his face
and pretending to hold a handgun.
In those robberies, he netted a total of $1,300.
FitzPatrick said Dunkovich seemed to have abandoned the yellow
jacket but sometimes wore a yellow shirt during the robberies. At the
time of his arrest, he wasn’t wearing any yellow.
If convicted, he could face 25 years to life.
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