Delco Male Gets Federal Prison For Trying To Blow Up ATM’s
by Alex Lloyd Gross
Cushmir McBride of Yeadon is going to spend the next eight years is federal prison, after he entered a guilty plea to charges that he set off explosives near ATM’s . Several of those ATM’s were inside banks or department stores.
On October 28, 2020, McBride and codefendants Nasser McFall, 25, of Claymont, DE, and Kamar Thompson, 37, of Philadelphia, PA, conspired to break into a Target in the Port Richmond section of Philadelphia and set off an explosive device in order to steal money from an ATM inside. The following day, October 29, the defendants broke into a Wawa on Richmond Street in Philadelphia, where they again set off explosive devices in order to steal money from the ATM. On October 31, 2020, the defendants broke into another Wawa in Northeast Philadelphia and detonated an explosive device. On November 4, 2020, the defendants set off an explosive device in another Wawa in Claymont, DE, in an attempt to rob this store in the same manner, and on December 2, 2020, the three defendants set off an explosive device inside an ATM at a Wells Fargo bank in Philadelphia. McBride was also charged with setting off an explosive device at a Wells Fargo ATM in Philadelphia on March 2, 2021. In total, the defendants were able to steal approximately $417,000 during the course of the robberies.
Thompson pleaded guilty in November 2021 to conspiracy to maliciously damage property used in interstate commerce by means of an explosive, and aiding and abetting, six counts of maliciously damaging property used in interstate commerce by means of an explosive, and possession of a firearm by a convicted felon.
McFall pleaded guilty to five counts against him in June 2022, and in January of this year was sentenced by the late U.S. District Judge Gene E.K. Pratter to 78 months’ imprisonment, three years of supervised release, and restitution in the amount of $256,083.
Authorities said this was around the time that police in Philadelphia shot and killed Wallace Weaver in West Philadelphia. Peaceful protests ensued as well as multiple acts of violence and looting across the city.