A Germantown man has been sentenced to 20 years in prison after pleading guilty to multiple burglary charges stemming from a series of residential break-ins in Frederick.
Todd A. Dixon-Latkovski, 53, accepted a binding plea agreement Friday in Frederick County Circuit Court and was sentenced by Judge Julia A. Martz-Fisher to serve 20 years in the Division of Correction for two counts of first-degree burglary and one count of second-degree burglary. He will receive credit for time served since February 2026.
According to prosecutors, the case began on Oct. 28, 2025, when Frederick Police responded to a residential burglary in which the homeowner reported numerous items stolen, including credit cards, medications, personal identification and a PlayStation 5. Investigators traced unauthorized credit card transactions to a local liquor store, where surveillance footage and a distinctive tattoo helped identify Dixon-Latkovski. On Feb. 6, 2026, police responded to another burglary on Kline Boulevard and found the defendant inside a residence. He fled but was apprehended nearby, and detectives later linked him to additional unsolved burglaries.
Judge Martz-Fisher said burglaries have a lasting impact on victims, noting that they undermine a person’s sense of safety within their own home. In addition to his prison sentence, Dixon-Latkovski was ordered to serve five years of supervised probation, pay restitution, undergo substance abuse and mental health treatment, and avoid contact with the victims and their properties.
