Martin
Tucker won his latest boxing match, but a bloody nose in the ring could send
him to prison for bank robbery.
The FBI said it obtained a swab used to stop the bleeding and
found that DNA matched Tucker's DNA on other evidence from a 2009 robbery at Monroe
county community credit union in
Temperance, near the Michigan-Ohio border.
In a court filing, agent Robert
Schmitz said he was aware of Tucker's bout in April in Toledo, Ohio, and
obtained the "discarded" Q-tips swab.
Tucker's DNA matched DNA from a mask believed to have been used in
the robbery and from the steering wheel of the getaway car, the FBI said.
Tucker, 32, of Toledo, was arrested this week and ordered held
without bond Wednesday. The government alleges he wore a mask and had a handgun
during the $5,400 robbery. Another suspect was indicted in the case
in November.
Detroit FBI spokesman Simon
shaykhet declined to discuss how
Schmitz got the bloody swab. Defence attorney Haythem
faraj said there seems nothing
illegal about acquiring it.
"We leave our fingerprints, bits of hair and skin all over
the place. If you're a boxer, sometimes you leave your blood around,"
Faraj said in an interview Thursday.
He declined to comment on Tucker's alleged role in the robbery but
doubts the blood sample really was necessary based on other DNA evidence.
"It is a dramatic twist. It makes for an interesting
read," Faraj said.
He said Tucker, a light welterweight, is a roofer and part-time
boxer. He's 1-6 in his last seven bouts, according to boxrec.com.
Bronco McKart, who also boxed that night in Toledo, knows Tucker
and was surprised by the allegations.
"That's 'CSI Miami' stuff," McKart told the Monroe evening news, referring to the
bloody swab. "That's just amazing."
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