Man who sent Facebook message about committing a campus sexual assault pleads guilty
Ian Cleary, 32, who was raised in Silicon Valley before attending Gettysburg College in Pennsylvania, had hired a private lawyer to review the evidence as he considered a potential plea.
Judge Kevin Hess set an Oct. 20 sentencing date. The two sides proposed a four- to eight-year sentence, which the judge can accept or not.
Accuser Shannon Keeler, in interviews with the Associated Press, described her decade-long efforts to persuade authorities to pursue charges, starting hours after she says Cleary, a third-year student, sneaked into her first-year dorm on the eve of winter break.
She renewed the quest in 2021 after finding a series of disturbing Facebook messages from his account. Keeler faced Cleary in the courtroom Thursday for the first time since the attack. She clutched her husband's hand as Cleary entered the courtroom in handcuffs and listened stoically as he gave brief answers to the judge's questions.
Cleary has been in custody since his arrest on minor, unrelated charges in Metz, France, in April 2024. A defense lawyer told the judge Thursday that Cleary experienced several mental health episodes there and was hospitalized around the time he sent the Facebook message in 2019.
The second-degree sexual assault charge carries a maximum 10 years in prison. His family members have declined to comment on the case and have not attended his court hearings.
Cleary, who grew up in Saratoga, Calif., left Gettysburg after the assault and finished college near home. He then got a master's degree and worked for Tesla before moving overseas, where he spent time writing medieval fiction, according to his online posts.
The AP published an investigation on the case and on the broader reluctance among prosecutors to pursue campus sex assault charges in May 2021. An indictment followed weeks later.
Authorities in the U.S. and Europe had been trying to track down Cleary until his capture in France.
The AP typically does not name people who say they have been sexually assaulted unless they come forward publicly, as Keeler has done.
Dale writes for the Associated Press.

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Politico
40 minutes ago
- Politico
Why is DOJ speaking with Ghislaine Maxwell?
DAY TWO — As part of the Trump administration's effort to contain the backlash from their handling of the so-called Epstein files, Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche spent a second day in Tallahassee today interviewing Ghislaine Maxwell. As a diversionary tactic, it's understandable. But as a strictly prosecutorial matter, the effort makes almost no sense. Maxwell, Epstein's longtime partner, raises multiple red flags that would ordinarily make her a very poor candidate to serve as a cooperating witness for the government. Among them: Maxwell's crimes with Jeffrey Epstein were heinous, and she went to trial instead of admitting her guilt and pleading out. She's serving a 20-year prison sentence for child sex trafficking and other crimes. On top of that, the Justice Department has already discredited her. They charged her with two perjury counts (which were later dropped after the sex trafficking conviction) and told the judge during her 2021 trial that she had been willing to 'brazenly lie under oath about her conduct.' Any credible DOJ cooperation deal at this point would require her to plead to those perjury counts, but it is far from clear whether she is willing to do that. The conduct at issue is also very old. Epstein and Maxwell's relationship dates back to the 1990s, and as a result, it will be much harder for the government to corroborate her testimony with other evidence or generate credible information that the government can act upon to charge others at this late date. Adding to the DOJ's problems is the fact that Maxwell has an obvious incentive to lie or otherwise shade her testimony to curry favor with the government. She would presumably want a pardon or commutation of her sentence at the end of the process, and the Trump administration appears particularly interested in information or testimony that would reflect well on Trump amid the growing body of information and reporting concerning his relationship with Epstein. (Trump has repeatedly and vehemently denied any involvement in or awareness of criminal misconduct on the part of Epstein or Maxwell.) Then there's the fact that Blanche himself is doing the interviews with Maxwell. The deputy AG is the DOJ's second-in-command. He presumably has more pressing and consequential matters to attend to than trying to execute a Hail-Mary cooperation deal with a child sex trafficker who is already in prison and who is unlikely to ever emerge as a credible witness in the eyes of the American public. So what gives? Trump and the DOJ are clearly feeling public and political pressure following their effort to quickly move past the Epstein saga and related conspiracy theories — theories that were advanced and indulged in recent years by Trump himself, along with Vice President JD Vance, FBI Director Kash Patel, Attorney General Pam Bondi and Deputy FBI Director Dan Bongino, among many other Trump allies. They are also clearly reluctant to release the information that those closely following the Epstein saga actually want — witness interviews, financial records, correspondence and flight logs, among other things. Maxwell aside, it is also unlikely that the grand jury testimony that the DOJ is separately seeking to unseal in New York will satisfy those tracking the Epstein saga even if the government is successful. That is true for a variety of reasons, not the least of which is that the testimony at issue likely represents only a sliver of information in the government's possession and may not have ranged widely beyond the specific charges that were brought in court against Epstein and Maxwell. As a result, onlookers should view any information that emerges through these avenues skeptically. One thing, however, is clear: The Trump administration and the DOJ are extending a saga that deeply traumatized Epstein's many victims. Under ordinary circumstances, the interests of victims in a situation like this would supersede the political interests of the White House, but they appear to have made a very different calculation. Welcome to POLITICO Nightly. 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Miami Herald
2 hours ago
- Miami Herald
Dog left to die in apartment waited on her owners. Then came help, and a tail wag
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New York Post
2 hours ago
- New York Post
Anti-Trump DA Alvin Bragg sure acts like he has something to hide — we're suing to find out
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