
US fugitive who faked his own death convicted of rape
Nicholas Rossi, 38, was found guilty of the 2008 sexual assault of his then-girlfriend by a jury in Salt Lake City on Wednesday.
Rossi was first detained in 2021 after checking himself into a hospital in the Scottish city of Glasgow with COVID-19.
Medical staff and police identified him by comparing his tattoos with pictures of Rossi on an Interpol wanted notice.
It soon emerged that Rossi, using the name Nicholas Alahverdian, had earlier faked his own death, creating an obituary stating he had died of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma.
He was extradited back to the US in January 2024.
During an appeal, Rossi claimed to be a victim of mistaken identity, and that he was in fact an Irish orphan called Arthur Knight.
He claimed he had been tattooed while comatose in the hospital and that his fingerprints had been modified.
But the appeal against his removal was rejected. A judge found him to be 'as dishonest and deceitful as he is evasive and manipulative,' and approved his extradition.
Following the conviction, Salt Lake County District Attorney Sim Gill praised Rossi's victim for her courage in taking the stand during the trial.
'It's her courage, her resilience in coming forward... that was the key to this case,' he said.
Rossi now faces five years to life in prison, with his sentencing scheduled for October, the local Utah ABC affiliate reported.
Rossi is also awaiting trial next month for another alleged rape in 2008.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Arab News
an hour ago
- Arab News
Thieves grab $2 million in jewelry in Seattle heist that took less than 2 minutes
SEATTLE: Smash-and-grab thieves in Seattle made off with an estimated $2 million in diamonds, luxury watches, gold and other items in a daring midday jewelry store robbery that took just about 90 seconds, police said Friday. Video from the West Seattle store's surveillance cameras shows four masked suspects shattering the locked glass front door with hammers and then ransacking six display cases Thursday. One display held around $750,000 worth in Rolex watches, police said in a statement, and another had an emerald necklace valued at $125,000. A masked suspect threatened workers with bear spray and a Taser, police said, but no one was injured. 'We're pretty shook up as a staff,' Josh Menashe, vice president of the family-owned store, said by phone Friday. 'We're gonna be closed for a while.' Menashe said workers finished cleaning up the broken glass and were working on a full inventory of the losses. Police said they responded to the robbery but the suspects had already fled in a getaway car and eluded a search of the area.


Al Arabiya
20 hours ago
- Al Arabiya
US attorney general names DEA boss Cole as DC's ‘emergency police commissioner'
US Attorney General Pam Bondi issued a directive late on Thursday naming Drug Enforcement Administration head Terry Cole as the 'emergency police commissioner' of Washington's Metropolitan Police Department. 'Commissioner Cole shall assume all of the powers and duties vested in the District of Columbia Chief of Police,' Bondi's directive said, adding Cole will have the authority to issue orders that apply to MPD members. MPD's existing leadership, including the current police chief and bureau heads, 'must receive approval from Commissioner Cole before issuing any further directives to the MPD,' Bondi's order said. US President Donald Trump said earlier this week he was deploying hundreds of National Guard troops to Washington and temporarily taking over the city's police department to curb what he has depicted as a crime emergency in the US capital, though statistics show incidents of violent crime have dropped. Trump, a Republican, said on Wednesday he will seek long-term federal control of Washington's police force to crack down on crime, engaging in an escalating campaign to exert presidential power over the nation's capital, a Democratic stronghold. Muriel Bowser, Washington's mayor and a Democrat, has pushed back on Trump's claims that crime is rising, noting that violent crime hit its lowest level in more than three decades last year. Both federal and city crime statistics show that violent crime in Washington has declined sharply since a peak in 2023. Trump called the statistics 'fraud.' Trump has previously threatened to expand his efforts to other Democratic-run cities, such as Chicago, that he also claims have failed to address crime. Trump's extraordinary moves in Washington are reflective of how he has approached his second term in office, shattering legal concerns to test the limits of his office's power.


Al Arabiya
a day ago
- Al Arabiya
Man dies fleeing ICE raid in California: Police
A man who was believed to have been running from a raid by US immigration agents died Thursday after being hit by a car on a freeway, police said. City managers in Monrovia, near Los Angeles, said police had been called after there were reports of activity by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents at a Home Depot. During the raid, one man ran from the parking lot of the hardware store -- a place where day laborers commonly gather looking for casual work -- and onto a busy freeway during rush hour, Monrovia City Manager Dylan Feik told media. A spokesman for the California Highway Patrol (CHP) said the 40-year-old man was taken to a hospital where he died from his injuries a few hours later. Neither CHP nor the city were immediately able to provide any details on the man's identity. Feik said: 'The city has not received any communication or information from ICE.' ICE did not immediately respond to an AFP request for information. Masked and armed agents from ICE and US Border Patrol began carrying out raids in and around Los Angeles earlier this year, as President Donald Trump looked to fulfill his election promise to carry out the most deportations in US history. The raids, which target hardware stores, carwashes and other businesses where undocumented people seek work, sparked fury in the multicultural city. Protests in Los Angeles, some of which saw isolated instances of violence, were met with the mass deployment of soldiers by the federal government, even as local law enforcement said they could handle the unrest. A federal court in July ordered a halt to ICE's roving patrols in several California counties, after rights groups argued that the raids appeared to be arresting people largely based on their race, the language they were speaking or the place they had gathered.