Current:Home > ContactAssault suspect who allegedly wrote "So I raped you" on Facebook still on the run 2 years after charges were filed -AssetTrainer
Assault suspect who allegedly wrote "So I raped you" on Facebook still on the run 2 years after charges were filed
TrendPulse Quantitative Think Tank Center View
Date:2025-04-07 20:09:16
A man suspected of sending a woman a Facebook message that said, "So I raped you," remains on the run two years after charges were filed over the former Gettysburg College student's 2013 campus sexual assault. Shannon Keeler, 28, and her attorneys question how Ian T. Cleary has avoided capture in an age when people are tracked by their cellphones, internet connections, security cameras and credit card purchases.
Investigators, led by the U.S. Marshals Service, believe the 30-year-old from Silicon Valley is likely overseas and on the move.
"How is he financially supporting himself? How is he able to travel abroad without detection? Has he assumed a false identity?" asked Andrea Levy, legal director of the Pennsylvania Coalition Against Rape, who represents Keeler. "Who's helping him?"
Keeler was sexually assaulted on a snowy December night in her dorm room. She texted friends for help even before her assailant fled, and went to police the same day.
For years, local officials declined her pleas to file charges, even after she showed them the startling Facebook messages she discovered in 2020. They reversed course weeks after she went public in an Associated Press story that examined the reluctance of local agencies to prosecute campus sexual assaults.
For Keeler, the years of limbo have been painful, even as she moves forward with her life and career. She works for a software company and is getting married this fall. But she remains on high alert for an arrest that could come at any time, knowing a trial could disrupt her life for months or even years.
"She's had to push and push and put herself out there … and then he's just literally gone on with his life. It's hard to measure that impact on her as a human being, (and on) her family, her partner," Levy said. "There's a cost. There's a real human cost. It's someone's life."
After leaving Gettysburg, Cleary, 30, graduated from Santa Clara University, near a family home in Saratoga, California, worked for Tesla, then moved to France for several years, according to his website, which describes his self-published medieval fiction.
Adams County District Attorney Brian Sinnett, who filed the arrest warrant on June 29, 2021, called the duration of the search "somewhat frustrating."
"I just have to think this person is accessing resources from somewhere," Sinnett said.
Neither Cleary's father in California, a marketing executive who has served as a professor and trustee at Santa Clara, nor his mother in Baltimore returned messages this month seeking comment.
U.S. marshals said the search remains active. An Interpol Red Notice has been issued, asking police agencies worldwide to detain Cleary, although he is not yet listed in the public database, which includes a few dozen rape and sexual assault cases.
"We put a lot of work and effort into it," said Deputy U.S. Marshal Phil Lewis, warrant supervisor for the office in the Middle District of Pennsylvania. "Any crimes against women and children, we take seriously and we make those types of cases a priority."
As the #MeToo movement continues to shape society — and some adults, including accusers of Bill Cosby and Donald Trump, use the courts to seek monetary damages if it's too late for criminal charges — college students are also seeking accountability.
In California, students are lobbying for campus health centers to keep rape kits on hand, or pay for victims in the throes of trauma to travel to a hospital for an exam. More states are requiring colleges to survey students on the climate around sexual assault, and groups such as End Rape on Campus are working on tools to make school data more accessible.
And some law enforcement agencies have shown sustained commitment, including police who stayed on top of advances in DNA science to make an arrest this year in a 2000 knifepoint rape on a Penn State golf course.
In 2004, they matched the DNA to an unsolved 1999 golf course rape in Michigan. In 2011, they filed a "John Doe" arrest warrant, identifying the subject only by his DNA before the 12-year statute of limitations in Pennsylvania expired. Using genetic genealogy, they identified the suspect this year as Michigan business owner Kurt Rillema, and matched the DNA samples to a coffee cup he discarded at a Lexus dealership before charging him in both cases.
"The police so often get beat up for doing the wrong thing. Here, it's pretty impressive, they were on the ball," said lawyer Conor Lamb, who sued Rillema last month on behalf of the Penn State accuser, a 42-year-old woman in suburban Philadelphia.
Rilemma's lawyers plan to challenge the privacy issues raised by the genetic sleuthing, especially the way his DNA from the coffee cup was obtained without a warrant.
"Everybody wants to solve old crimes, but the process is so invasive, and when it's done without a warrant, people ought to think about that. It's creepy and scary," said defense lawyer Deanna Kelley of suburban Detroit.
In Gettysburg, meanwhile, a small town known for its Civil War history, Sinnett said there is now more coordination between campus and local police, in the hope that more college rape victims can have their day in court.
Keeler is still waiting for that day, nearly a decade after she reported the attack and Cleary left school, ending the college's Title IX investigation.
"Since then, he has again run away from facing this felony charge," she said, while she tries to "to finally close this never-ending, painful chapter of my life."
- In:
- Pennsylvania
- Assault
- Indictment
- Sexual Assault
- Michigan
- Crime
veryGood! (482)
Related
- 'Survivor' 47 finale, part one recap: 2 players were sent home. Who's left in the game?
- 'King Of The Hill' actor Johnny Hardwick, who voiced Dale Gribble, dies at 64
- Detroit police changing facial-recognition policy after pregnant woman says she was wrongly charged
- Police investigate shooting at Nashville library that left 2 people wounded
- B.A. Parker is learning the banjo
- UN Security Council to hold first open meeting on North Korea human rights situation since 2017
- FEC moves toward potentially regulating AI deepfakes in campaign ads
- Traveling to Hawaii? Here's what to know about the Maui fire.
- The Daily Money: Spending more on holiday travel?
- Emmy Awards announces rescheduled date for January 2024 due to Hollywood strikes
Ranking
- Tree trimmer dead after getting caught in wood chipper at Florida town hall
- Biden asks Congress for more than $13 billion in emergency defense aid for Ukraine
- AP Week in Pictures: North America
- Man cited for animal neglect after dog dies in triple-digit heat during Phoenix hike
- Federal appeals court upholds $14.25 million fine against Exxon for pollution in Texas
- Sweden stakes claim as a Women's World Cup favorite by stopping Japan in quarterfinals
- Iraq bans the word homosexual on all media platforms and offers an alternative
- Arizona state fish, the Apache trout, is no longer considered endangered
Recommendation
'Most Whopper
Mastering the Art of Capital Allocation with the Market Whisperer, Kenny Anderson
Fashion Nova shoppers to get refunds after settlement: How to file a claim
Coach parent Tapestry and Versace owner Capri fashion a $8.5 billion merger
Backstage at New York's Jingle Ball with Jimmy Fallon, 'Queer Eye' and Meghan Trainor
Bruce Springsteen honors Robbie Robertson of The Band at Chicago show
Map, satellite images show where Hawaii fires burned throughout Lahaina, Maui
So-far unfixable problem with 2023 Ford Explorer cameras frustrates customers, dealers