SHARE

Onetime Englewood basketball phenom Sean Banks in trouble again

ANOTHER CVP SCOOP: Onetime pro basketball sure thing Sean Anthony Banks of Englewood is in trouble again — this time on charges of threatening the father of a woman he’d been seeing and having marijuana on him when Englewood police arrested him.

Photo Credit: by Mary K. Miraglia
Photo Credit: by Mary K. Miraglia

This comes while Banks, 28, was out on bail following his December arrest in a domestic violence incident — and as he awaits trials on other charges that could send him to state prison for several years.

Patrol officers who’d been looking for Banks in connection with the alleged threats spotted him walking along St. Nicholas Avenue late Monday, Englewood Police Chief Arthur O’Keefe said.

Two weeks ago, Banks “became involved in a dispute with the father of a female he had been dating at one point,” the chief said.

The father told police he caught Banks trying to force open a window to his house and confronted him.

Banks demanded to see the woman, and when the father refused, he said, Banks “threatened to do him harm and left.”

Banks posted bail and was released a short time after being taken to the Bergen County Jail. He faces charges of threatening to commit a crime and marijuana possession.

He already was in serious trouble after being charged along with other members of an offshoot of the notorious “James Bond Gang” of area burglaries following a high-speed chase and crash while being pursued by police after break-ins at homes in Sparta and Jefferson Township.

The New Orleans Hornets signed the 6-foot-8-inch Bergen Catholic star as an undrafted rookie free agent in the summer of 2005 and assigned him to the team’s developmental affiliate in Tulsa after he averaged four points a game in pre-season and spendt the first seven games of the NBA season on the inactive list.

After the Hornets waived him, Banks played in Puerto Rico and with other U.S. developmental teams. He’d become a father and had hopes of playing for Great Britain’s national team. His last great hurrah was scoring 14 points in a D-League All-Star game five years ago.

The naturally gifted Banks wasn’t just any player coming out of Bergen County. At Memphis University, he was the Conference USA Freshman of the Year in 2004, scoring 17.4 points per game and grabbing 6.5 rebounds for a major college program.

But things went sour after Banks left school, unable to meet the academic requirements.

His criminal behavior began simply, with charges of drunk driving and the gang-related marking of a girl with a cigarette.

Then it got worse.

Banks was in an SUV that took off after being stopped for speeding in August 2011 a short time after a pair of nearby burglaries.

The vehicle flipped during the chase, trapping Banks and three other men with him inside. Inside the SUV, police said, they recovered more than $20,000 worth of stolen goods.

Englewood Police Chief Arthur O’Keefe
(CLIFFVIEW PILOT photo by Mary K. Miraglia)

The occupants were later identified by Englewood police as major area burglars: Aasim Boone and his brother, Akeem “Light” Boone, both of Englewood, and Jerry Montgomery of Teaneck.

Akeem Boone had barely been out of state prison two years when the incident occurred, records showed.

The brothers rejected separate plea deals – one that would have put the elder Boone (who drove the SUV) behind bars for 15 years and the other that would have meant a five-year sentence for Akeem.

Montgomery was offered a five-year deal, too, in addition to a four-year sentence he was already facing for a burglary conviction in Somerset County.

A judge assigned Banks a public defender after his lawyer said he couldn’t get through to him – or get paid.

Authorities identified him, the Boone brothers and Montgomery as copycats of the Teaneck/Englewood area’s Bond Gang, which targeted upscale homes, kept an electronic ear out for police on scanners, then kicked or shouldered in front doors, cut the phone lines, dashed to master bedrooms and made off with jewelry and other valuables — after spending no more than a few minutes inside, if that long.

The chase and arrest officially put the Boone brothers and other members of a large-scale burglary crew with criminal pasts on the radar of law enforcement agencies that stretched from Morris to Fairfield County in Connecticut.

Last October, members of a multi-jurisdictional task force that had been tailing them burst into a Williams Street garage near the King Gardens apartment complex in Englewood and grabbed Akeem Boone – at the time a wanted felon — and other accused crew members.

Another defendant, Renando L. Sheffield, turned himself in weeks later after detectives tracked him down.

Sheffield and Aasim Boone were free on bail pending trial on charges of burglarizing an Old Tappan home in November 2011.

CLICK HERE FOR: More on Sean Banks and the James Bond Gang

In addition to the charges filed in connection with his recent incidents, Banks still faces complaints of hindering prosecution, obstruction, criminal mischief and other counts from previous cases — and those are just in Englewood.

Additional charges are pending elsewhere, including in Wayne stemming from a July 2011 incident, records show.

JAMES BOND GANG:

The “James Bond Gang,” which dates back to the late 1980s and was first publicized by the author of this story, got its name from a tricked-out BMW that had secret compartments and a flip-up license plate that hid a quartet of blinding halogen lights used to thwart police. The FBI said the car also had an oil slick-squirting pipe behind the bumper.

JAMES BOND GANG VIDEO Pt. 1:

JAMES BOND GANG VIDEO Pt. 2:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

to follow Daily Voice South Passaic and receive free news updates.

SCROLL TO NEXT ARTICLE