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Two Nicholasville, KY residents sentenced for home invasions

Twenty-eight-year-old Erick Reynolds and 32-year-old Shaylin Floyd receive prison terms in Jessamine Circuit Court
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By Shelley Catharine Johnson
Deputy Communications Director, KY Attorney General's office

Attorney General Jack Conway and his Office of Special Prosecutions today announced the sentencing in Jessamine Circuit Court of two Nicholasville residents in connection with a string of home invasions between July and September 2012.



Twenty-eight-year-old Erick Reynolds received a 10-year sentence after pleading guilty on February 8 to nine counts of burglary 2nd degree and one count of theft by unlawful taking. Reynolds also pled guilty to being a persistent felony offender in the 2nd degree and admitted he broke into eight different homes, one of them twice, as well as a vehicle. Reynolds stole jewelry and other valuables and then sold them at a pawn shop. At the time of the thefts, Reynolds was on probation for a 2011 burglary conviction for which he received an eight-year sentence. The sentence imposed today will run consecutively with the eight-year sentence.

Also sentenced today was 32-year-old Shaylin Floyd who received five years in prison on nine counts of burglary 2nd degree for her role in the burglaries committed by Reynolds. Floyd admitted she drove Reynolds to the homes that were burglarized and assisted in obtaining cash for the stolen items. Floyd's sentence will run consecutively to a one year sentence for theft in Fayette County, for which Floyd was on probation at the time of the Jessamine County burglaries.

"I appreciate the hard work of my Office of Special Prosecutions and local law enforcement in bringing this case to a successful close," General Conway said.

The charges against Reynolds and Floyd were the result of an investigation by the Nicholasville Police Department and Jessamine County Sheriff's Office.

Attorney General Conway's Office of Special Prosecutions handled the prosecution of this case at the request of Commonwealth's Attorney Thomas Lockridge, due to the fact that a prosecutor in his office was among the burglary victims.


This story was posted on 2013-04-12 15:38:03
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