Police say more suspects are still being sought in the Clinton heist.
CLINTON, MD — A Capitol Heights man has been charged in a 2025 armored truck robbery outside a Prince George’s County bank that left a driver injured and netted more than $500,000 in cash, police said Friday.
Jerronta Bryant, 31, was arrested Wednesday in Washington, D.C., after Prince George’s County police identified him as one of the suspects in the Nov. 3 robbery. Police said Bryant faces armed robbery and related charges, remains jailed in the District and is awaiting extradition to Prince George’s County. Detectives said the case is still active and that they are working to arrest others involved.
The robbery happened at about 8:25 a.m. in the 8800 block of Woodyard Road in Clinton, a busy commercial area where banks and retail businesses sit near major roads. Officers were called there after multiple suspects approached an armored truck driver as he prepared to deliver cash to a bank, police said. The driver suffered minor injuries during the robbery. Police have not released the driver’s name, the name of the bank or the armored truck company. The suspects fled after taking more than $500,000, according to police.
Prince George’s County police announced the arrest Friday morning, more than seven months after the robbery. The department said its Robbery Unit used several investigative techniques to identify Bryant as one of the suspects. Police did not describe those techniques in detail and did not say whether surveillance video, witness statements, phone records or recovered property helped lead detectives to him. “Detectives are actively working to arrest additional suspects,” police said in the announcement. Officials did not say how many people they believe took part in the robbery.
Bryant was arrested by the Prince George’s County Police Department’s Fugitive Unit, which works as part of the U.S. Marshals Service Capital Area Regional Fugitive Task Force. Authorities said the unit found him in Washington, D.C., on Wednesday and recovered a firearm during the arrest. Police did not say whether the firearm was believed to have been used in the Clinton robbery or whether Bryant faces any separate weapons charges in the District. It was not immediately clear whether Bryant had an attorney who could speak on his behalf.
The case centers on a type of crime that often draws several layers of law enforcement attention because armored truck robberies can involve armed suspects, large sums of cash and workers handling deposits in public spaces. In this case, police said the driver was attacked while preparing to move money into a bank, a moment when cash transfers can be exposed before workers reach a secured area. No other injuries were reported in the Friday announcement. Police also have not said whether any of the stolen money has been recovered.
The Nov. 3 robbery first drew a police response shortly before 8:30 a.m., when officers went to the Woodyard Road block for a report of an armed robbery. Early reports said an undisclosed amount of money had been taken and that the driver was hurt. Police later said the amount exceeded $500,000. The Friday update added Bryant’s name, age and hometown, and marked the first publicly announced arrest in the case. The charges against him are allegations, and the case will move forward in court after he is returned to Prince George’s County.
Bryant’s next procedural step is extradition from Washington, D.C., to Prince George’s County, where he is expected to face the armed robbery case. Police did not announce a court date Friday. Once he is brought to Maryland, court records are expected to show the full list of charges, bond status and any scheduled hearings. Detectives also said a cash reward is being offered for information that leads to arrests and indictments in the case, showing investigators still believe key parts of the robbery remain unresolved.
The arrest leaves several questions unanswered, including how the suspects fled, whether a getaway vehicle was used, how long the robbery lasted and whether the driver was directly threatened with a weapon. Police also have not released descriptions of the additional suspects. The department’s Strategic Investigations Division’s Robbery Unit is handling the investigation, and the case has been assigned number 25-0061357. The public update did not identify any recovered cash, stolen property or other evidence beyond the firearm seized during Bryant’s arrest.
As of Saturday, Bryant remained in custody in Washington, D.C., pending extradition. Prince George’s County police said the investigation is continuing, with detectives still trying to identify and arrest other suspects tied to the Nov. 3 armored truck robbery.
Author note: Last updated June 20, 2026.