A 55-year-old ex-con was sentenced on Wednesday, Feb. 11, to 10 years behind bars for carrying out a takeover-style bank robbery in Anaheim —one day after he got out of state prison.
Eric Walter Gray, who has a lengthy criminal history, pleaded guilty in Los Angeles federal court in October 2025 to a single count of “bank robbery and forced accompaniment.”
Along with the prison sentence, Gray was ordered to pay restitution of $10,883, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office.
Police responded at about 4:40 p.m. on May 8, 2024, to a bank robbery in progress at a BMO branch at 5401 E. La Palma Ave., between Imperial Highway and Lakeview Avenue, FBI Special Agent Trevor Twitchell wrote in an affidavit in support of a criminal complaint.
Gray, an Orange County resident, loitered in the bank, telling an employee he was waiting for a ride, Twitchell said. After he returned from a bathroom, Gray leaped a teller counter, announced he had a gun and stole more than $2,000 in cash from two teller drawers, the FBI agent stated.
Gray stuffed the cash in his pockets and forced the bank manager and two other employees into a storage room, preventing them from leaving by blocking and barricading the door, Twitchell said.
After a while he let the two employees go, keeping the bank manager confined for about an hour, the agent said.
Gray eventually surrendered to police.
“While in custody at the Anaheim Police Department, Gray was found to have hidden cash and narcotics within his rectal cavity,” Twitchell said.
Police suspected he had more hidden in him, so they took him to a hospital for a CT scan, where he “repeatedly attempted to escape and fought with officers, resulting in multiple injuries to the officers involved,” the agent wrote in the affidavit.
Court papers show Gray has a criminal history that includes grand-theft auto, robbery, sexual battery and narcotics-related offenses.
He had been released from San Quentin state prison a day before the Anaheim heist.
In the previous case, Gray was sentenced to two years in prison while on parole in 2023 for failure to register as a sex offender and two years for second-degree robbery, to be served concurrently, court papers show. He received more than a year’s credit for time served while awaiting sentencing.
“Unfortunately, defendant’s crimes appear to be growing more serious, not less serious, as he ages,” according to the government’s sentencing papers.