(Heather Poltrock, WSAW) One of the men involved in “jackpotting” a Marshfield ATM was sentenced in Wood County Court.
According to Heather Poltrock with WSAW, Wood County investigators said, back in December of 2024, three men installed software on a bank ATM in Marshfield that allowed them to withdraw more than $114,000.
When officers arrived to investigate, a portion of a latex glove was found inside the ATM. Surveillance video shows the suspect wearing a dark-colored sweatshirt and blue or purple surgical glove.
The person used a Bluetooth keyboard and a black screwdriver to access the ATM panel. This form of theft is known as ‘ATM jackpotting’. On Dec. 16, an off-duty police officer in Luxemburg saw a person access a bank ATM and remove the hard drive.
Two officers arrived and the person went to his vehicle. After a pursuit, Jhoenderson David Rojas Eganez was arrested. In Kewaunee County, the officer also made contact with two other men believed to be involved in the theft.
Yolfreide Perera and Alejandro Jose Sevilla Sanabria were also arrested in Kewaunee County. Both men said they were from Venezuela and were living in Chicago. They told officers they were in Kewaunee Door Dashing.
According to Rojas Eganez Wood County’s criminal complaint, he said he was working for an organization that provided him with training, equipment, a cell phone and money to conduct thefts from ATMs.
He said the group monitored police traffic radio and alerted him that police were dispatched to the bank. In Wood County, a third man, Worlly W. Garcia Albarracin, is facing charges. He’s accused of renting the hotel rooms the men stayed in.
The hotel staff said several men were with him and they arrived in separate vehicles. Yolfreide Perera is only charged in Kewaunee County. During Sanabria’s court appearance on Thursday of last week, he was found guilty of, due to a no contest plea, theft from a financial institution.\
Several other charges were dismissed and read in. He was sentenced to three years in state prison followed by 4 years of extended supervision.
Comments