09/10/2025 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 09/10/2025 09:17
PHILADELPHIA - United States Attorney David Metcalf announced that Leevah Mills, 25, of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, was sentenced to 135 months in prison, five years' supervised release, and $42,909 in restitution by United States District Judge Paul S. Diamond for taking part in a violent armed carjacking.
The defendant was charged by indictment in August 2023 with one count of carjacking and one count of using, carrying, and brandishing a firearm during and in relation to a crime of violence. He pleaded guilty to both charges in February of this year.
As detailed in court filings and admitted to by the defendant, in the early morning hours of July 11, 2023, Mills and two others carjacked a 26-year-old man who had just parked his car near his Northeast Philadelphia home, with the defendant and others pointing their semiautomatic pistols directly at the victim, at very close range. The carjackers then pistol-whipped the man, took his cell phone, and drove off in his Dodge Charger.
Philadelphia police officers soon located and followed the stolen vehicle. As Mills and his codefendants were trying to flee police in the Charger, they collided with another vehicle and crashed into a pole on Castor Avenue, where the stolen car caught fire and was destroyed. Police quickly apprehended all three carjackers after the crash.
Mills' co-defendants, Emmanuel Sia and Kysime Brown, also pleaded guilty to the charges against them and are scheduled to be sentenced in October.
"This roving crew of criminals ambushed and assaulted an innocent victim just trying to park his car and get home," said U.S. Attorney Metcalf. "My office and our partners on the Philadelphia Carjacking Task Force will continue to target violent individuals like Leevah Mills, to improve public safety and the quality of life in our city."
"Armed carjackings are brazen crimes that leave victims with lasting trauma and communities living in fear," said Wayne A. Jacobs, Special Agent in Charge of the FBI's Philadelphia Field Office. "Today's sentencing is a measure of justice, but more importantly, it is a promise to our community that the FBI and our law enforcement partners will not relent in protecting innocent people from senseless violence."
The case was investigated by the Philadelphia Police Department and the FBI and is being prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorney Thomas M. Zaleski.
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