A former Oklahoma City,
US police officer has been sentenced to 263 years in prison for the sodomy and
rape of black women in a low-income neighborhood while he was on duty. He has
been found guilty on a total of 18 counts out of 36.
RT
USA report continues:
District
Judge Timothy Henderson gave Daniel Holtzclaw, 29, the maximum possible term
given the severity of his crimes.
"I
think people need to realize that this is not a law-enforcement officer that
committed these crimes. This is a rapist who masqueraded as a law-enforcement
officer," Oklahoma County District Attorney Scott Prate said Thursday, the
New York Daily News reported.
According
to the case, between 2013 and 2014 Holtzclaw sexually assaulted 13 women, all
of whom were black residents of a poor neighborhood he used to patrol. They all
testified, however, charges involved eight of them. The youngest of his
victims, who he raped on her mother’s front porch, was 17, while the oldest,
who Holtzclaw forced to perform oral sex, was 58 at the time.
Another
victim, who identified herself as Shardayreon Hill, accused Holtzclaw of raping
her while she was handcuffed to a hospital bed. One more woman testified that
the former police officer gave her a ride home, where he followed her into the
bedroom and raped her.
Initially
indicted on 36 charges, Holtzclaw's was found guilty of 18 counts in early
December following a six-week trial.
Despite
victims’ accounts, Holtzclaw's defense attorney, Scott Adams, filed for a new
trial on the eve of the final hearing. Adams claimed that DNA evidence had not
been included into the investigation, which delayed Thursday's sentencing
hearing.
"If
there is additional DNA evidence despite the government's representations to
the contrary, and if there are additional people who came forward and falsely
claimed that they were victims ... then deliberate misrepresentations were made
not only to the defense counsel but to the Court, calling into question the
credibility of the government's entire case," the filing for a new trial
said.
Adams
cited a Facebook post by a police detective who spoke of evidence that was "withheld
from the defense by the government."
The
lawyer initially built his defense on Holtzclaw's reputation as a model officer
whose victims misinterpreted his efforts to help them, the New York Daily News
reported.
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