A Rhode Island man's brazen attempt to escape justice by faking his own death has finally caught up with him. Nicholas Alahverdian, 38, was sentenced to five years in prison on one count of rape conviction in Utah, a far cry from the life he tried to build for himself abroad.
For over a decade, authorities had been searching for Rossi, whose identity as a suspect was discovered through an old DNA rape kit. It wasn't until 2018 that his true self began to surface, but it took even longer for him to return to face the music. After creating a fake obituary claiming he died of non-Hodgkin lymphoma in 2020, Rossi vanished only to reappear in Scotland while battling COVID-19.
It was there that hospital staff spotted his distinctive tattoos โ including one belonging to Brown University โ which led to an Interpol notice and ultimately his extradition back to Utah. The long journey home came after a protracted court battle, during which Rossi claimed he was an Irish orphan named Arthur Knight being framed. However, investigators soon discovered at least a dozen aliases Rossi used over the years to evade capture.
The sentence is just the beginning for Rossi, who still faces another five-year-to-life prison term on an upcoming rape conviction in November. The victims in both cases spoke out against him, with one saying his crimes left her with "a trail of fear, pain and destruction" that would never fully heal. The prosecution argued that Rossi uses rape as a tool to control women, posing a risk to community safety.
Rossi himself maintains his innocence, claiming the women are lying. However, his words fell flat in court, where he was met with stern condemnation from both the judge and the victim. It's clear that justice has finally caught up with this cunning offender, who thought he could escape the law by staging his own death.
For over a decade, authorities had been searching for Rossi, whose identity as a suspect was discovered through an old DNA rape kit. It wasn't until 2018 that his true self began to surface, but it took even longer for him to return to face the music. After creating a fake obituary claiming he died of non-Hodgkin lymphoma in 2020, Rossi vanished only to reappear in Scotland while battling COVID-19.
It was there that hospital staff spotted his distinctive tattoos โ including one belonging to Brown University โ which led to an Interpol notice and ultimately his extradition back to Utah. The long journey home came after a protracted court battle, during which Rossi claimed he was an Irish orphan named Arthur Knight being framed. However, investigators soon discovered at least a dozen aliases Rossi used over the years to evade capture.
The sentence is just the beginning for Rossi, who still faces another five-year-to-life prison term on an upcoming rape conviction in November. The victims in both cases spoke out against him, with one saying his crimes left her with "a trail of fear, pain and destruction" that would never fully heal. The prosecution argued that Rossi uses rape as a tool to control women, posing a risk to community safety.
Rossi himself maintains his innocence, claiming the women are lying. However, his words fell flat in court, where he was met with stern condemnation from both the judge and the victim. It's clear that justice has finally caught up with this cunning offender, who thought he could escape the law by staging his own death.