Bank robber gets life sentence for using hostage as shield


              FILE - In this July 16, 2014, a Stockton Police officer investigates the scene after a vehicle involved in a suspected bank robbery was stopped in Stockton, Calif. The California man, Jaime Ramos, who used a woman he took hostage to shield himself from a spray of bullets fired by officers following a deadly bank robbery and car chase , is scheduled to be sentenced Tuesday, Feb. 21, 2017. (Craig Sanders/The Record via AP, File)
FILE - In this July 16, 2014, a Stockton Police officer investigates the scene after a vehicle involved in a suspected bank robbery was stopped in Stockton, Calif. The California man, Jaime Ramos, who used a woman he took hostage to shield himself from a spray of bullets fired by officers following a deadly bank robbery and car chase , is scheduled to be sentenced Tuesday, Feb. 21, 2017. (Craig Sanders/The Record via AP, File)

FRESNO, Calif. (AP) - A California man who used a woman he took hostage as a human shield from police gunfire after a deadly bank robbery and car chase was sentenced Tuesday to life in prison in an emotional hearing.

Jaime Ramos, 22, pleaded guilty last year in a deal with prosecutors to avoid a possible death sentence at trial. The 2014 robbery and chase through Stockton, 80 miles inland from San Francisco, ended in the deaths of two other suspects and Misty Holt-Singh, a 41-year-old wife, mother of two and bank customer who was taken hostage.

Ramos didn't speak in court, but Holt-Singh's mother stood to say a few words about her daughter before breaking down in tears. Somebody had to read her statement for her, San Joaquin County Deputy District Attorney Robert Himelblau said.

Two other women who were taken hostage but survived did not to attend the sentencing, finding it too difficult emotionally, Himelblau said. The plea deal avoids a stressful trial where they would have to relive the horror by testifying, he said.

"It makes sure that Ramos never sees the light of day again," the prosecutor said.

He added that Holt-Singh's husband, Paul, made a statement, revisiting his last conversation with his wife that day and later learning she had been killed.

In the midday heist, the three armed men stormed into a Bank of the West branch, then fled with their three hostages in an SUV owned by one of the bank employees.

The two surviving women were injured when they were thrown from the moving vehicle or jumped out during a chase lasting nearly an hour. In the shootout, officers fired roughly 600 bullets into the vehicle - 10 striking Holt-Singh as Ramos held her as a human shield, police have said.

Separate from the criminal case, Holt-Singh's family and the two surviving hostages have sued the Stockton Police Department and 32 officers involved in the shooting. City spokeswoman Connie Cochran said the three lawsuits are still pending.

The police department commissioned a review, finding that the shots the officers fired at the end of the pursuit were excessive and unnecessary.

Ramos pleaded guilty to murder, carjacking and attempted murder of a police officer late last year. His defense attorney, Jonathan Fattarsi, did not respond to requests for comment by The Associated Press.

A second man, Pablo Ruvalcaba, also pleaded guilty to Holt-Singh's killing, accepting a prison sentence of 25 years to life. The 23-year-old was accused of driving the three robbers to the bank.

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