At 25, Henry Lee Devon Moore is a notorious and unabashed career criminal.
He's been arrested and charged with dozens of crimes big and small across Minnesota, and has spent time in countless jails and three prisons. Before he allegedly severely beat and tased a check-cashing employee in Minneapolis last month, at least three counties had issued arrest warrants or scheduled sentencing hearings for him for recent drug and robbery offenses.
Moore, of Columbia Heights, now sits in the Hennepin County jail facing five fresh felony charges and the reality of a prison term that's likely to be lengthy. On Thursday, prosecutors argued for a $300,000 bail, far higher than the $15,000 bail imposed by a Ramsey County judge when Moore was charged with burglarizing two convenience stores in August.
His latest alleged crime appears to be his most violent. Although he has previously been arrested in aggravated robbery, assault and weapons offenses, most of his earlier bookings and charges consist of driver's license violations, failing to appear in court, giving false information to police officers, trespassing and loitering.
"He's been a very, very prolific criminal," said John Elder, spokesman for the Minneapolis Police Department. "Talking to detectives, they said this guy has just been on fire these last few months and was a true crime spree himself."
On Oct. 21, Moore and another man targeted an Unbank store in north Minneapolis, the charges against him say. The business, which has 16 locations in the metro area, offers check cashing and other financial services.
As a 48-year-old employee was locking up the business around 7:30 p.m., Moore and the other man shot her with a stun gun, took her car keys and forced her into the back seat of her car, the criminal complaint said. They repeatedly hit her and shot her with the stun gun, demanding the combination to the safe and vault inside the business.
The men then hit her with a hammer and took her driver's license from her wallet, threatening to rob her family if she failed to cooperate, the complaint said. With the injured woman now their hostage, they drove away.