A 60-year-old man was sentenced Friday, March 6, to 22 months in prison after pleading guilty to an attempted robbery of a Springfield bank.

Andrew Boaden McKissack was arrested after an Aug. 21 report that a man demanded money from employees at the Wells Fargo bank at 1600 Centennial Blvd.

Springfield police said they found McKissack about five minutes later walking through an adjoining business parking lot. McKissack matched the description of the suspect, police said.

News organizations in South Carolina reported in 2018 on McKissack calling police in Charleston, South Carolina, to turn himself in about two hours after a bank robbery in that city. 

Court records from South Carolina show McKissack pleaded guilty to entering a bank with intent to steal and was sentenced in 2021 to a 15-year sentence, with 10 years suspended after serving five years in prison. McKissack also received credit for 1,018 days spent in custody before his South Carolina sentencing hearing.

In Oregon, a Lane County grand jury in August indicted McKissack on felony charges of second-degree robbery and second-degree theft. McKissack took more than $100 in cash from Wells Fargo, according to the indictment.

After plea negotiations with prosecutors, McKissack pleaded guilty Friday to second-degree theft and a lesser included charge of second-degree attempted robbery.

In addition to the time in prison, Charles D. Carlson, a senior judge, sentenced McKissack to three years of post-prison supervision.