Temple Hills Man Sentenced 45 Years For 7‑Eleven Arson Scheme

Stephen Kennedy, a Temple Hills man, was sentenced Tuesday to 45 years in federal prison and three years of supervised release after a judge handed down a long term for a plot to torch convenience stores and rip cash from ATMs. Court records show the sentence also includes more than $370,000 in restitution. The case capped a multiagency probe into arsons and explosive attacks at 7‑Eleven locations that stretched over roughly a year.

As reported by FOX45 Baltimore, Kennedy, 34, was convicted on charges that include conspiracy to commit arson, arson affecting interstate commerce, commercial robbery, using or carrying a firearm during and in relation to a crime of violence, carrying an explosive device during the commission of a felony, and being a felon in possession of a firearm. FOX45 Baltimore also notes the restitution figure and that the sentence follows a federal trial and years of investigation.

How prosecutors say the scheme worked

Federal investigators say Kennedy and his co-conspirators traveled to 7‑Eleven stores between January 2021 and January 2022 and used explosive devices to start fires while the locations were open, forcing the businesses to close. According to the ATF, the group then cut power to security cameras and later returned to burglarize ATMs at the now unguarded stores. Investigators say the crew also torched vehicles and filed false reports in an effort to cover their tracks.

A federal jury found Kennedy guilty in February 2025 on those counts, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office, District of Maryland, which states that the scheme led to at least $90,000 in losses to an ATM company. The office also notes that co‑defendant Donnell Kelly previously pleaded guilty and received a 10‑year federal prison sentence. Prosecutors brought the case under Project Safe Neighborhoods, a multiagency initiative aimed at reducing violent crime…

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