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California man's 378-year sex abuse sentence dramatically overturned as judge rules migrant accuser made it up

California man's 378-year sex abuse sentence dramatically overturned as judge rules migrant accuser made it up

Daily Mail​29-05-2025
A California man has had his 378-year prison sentence overturned after a judge ruled his accuser made up evidence of sexual assault.
Ajay Dev, 58, was released last week after spending 16 years in state prison for 76 convictions of sexual assault on a minor and related charges.
He had been convicted of the serial rape of an adopted daughter named Sapna Dev who he and his wife helped bring to the US from his home nation of Nepal in 1998, when she was 15-years-old.
Superior Court Judge Janene Beronio said in her ruling that the then-teen girl had broken up with her boyfriend and accused her adoptive father of causing their split.
Sapna then told authorities that he raped her two or three times a week for three or four years before she moved out of their home.
Four witnesses who had not been contacted by Dev's trial lawyers testified at a recent hearing that Sapna had told them that her accusations were lies or were motivated by her anger at him, The San Francisco Chronicle reported.
One of the witnesses said Sapna told him she made the accusations because she 'was determined to return to the United States and needed to use the criminal charges to do that,' Beronio said.
According to the Daily Democrat, Sapna had returned to Nepal at that time and was imprisoned there due to wrong information being printed on her passport. It was then she made the allegations and US authorities helped her with a new passport so she could return to the US.
Sapna was ultimately granted American citizenship in light of the case and her cooperation with prosecutors, according to CBS.
Critical evidence had been missed which stemmed from a phone call that cops had arranged between the two, the Chronicle reported.
The audio recording was not clear and the jury during Sapna's original testimony in the 2000s heard it as her father saying: 'You had sex with me when you were 18'.
Beronio said that an enhanced recording was now available which say he had actually told her: 'You came with me after you were 18'.
The judge also said that another witness had testified that Sapna had given contradictory statements when she said she had aborted or miscarried three kids after from alleged pregnancies.
Beronio said that Sapna had frequently sent her adopted parents cards, texts and email expressing her love for them from 1999 up until 2004.
She added: 'If jurors had heard that evidence, the result of this case could have and most likely would have been different.'
His lawyer Jennifer Mouzis had filed his habeas corpus petition seeking to have him freed in 2018.
Judge Beronio scheduled a hearing for June 13 for Yolo County District Attorney Jeff Reisig to decide whether to retry Dev. Prosecutors could also appeal the ruling.
Deputy District Attorney Adrienne Chin-Perez contended during a hearing last week that Ajay Dev continues to pose a flight risk and a danger to the community.
She also read a statement from Sapna, who wrote that she is 'deeply afraid that Ajay will harm me.'
The judge's decision 'dismantles the DA´s case,' said Patricia Pursell, a member of advocacy group that has held demonstrations in support of Dev, who is also his sister-in-law.
'We have known from the beginning that Ajay Dev was wrongfully convicted,' she told the Chronicle. 'Judge Beronio was the first judge to really look closely at the evidence and read every document.'
Pursell also told CBS that when he was arrested his oldest son was two and that his wife was pregnant with another child. He was in prison when the child was born.
In a statement to the court seen by the outlet, Ajay said: 'The absence of fatherhood has been the most difficult while doing time for a crime I never committed. You gave me a purpose to live. I cannot wait to be home with you.'
Mouzis said much of the prosecution's evidence was based on racial and ethnic bias that would be illegal today under California´s Racial Justice Act, a 2021 law barring testimony that appeals to prejudice.
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A professor who taught accused Idaho killer Bryan Kohberger criminology in college and took him inside the mind of serial killers fears she may have inspired him as she reveals she may like to study his 'dark side'. Dr. Katherine Ramsland, who has long been an expert in the field of serial killers and once wrote a book with the BTK strangler, taught four different undergraduate and graduate courses to Kohberger at DeSales University in Pennsylvania. Ahead of Kohberger's scheduled appearance in court on Wednesday when he's likely to plead guilty in exchange for life in prison and no death penalty as part of a plea deal, Ramsland is finally speaking out on her pupil. Ramsland - who called Kohberger 'a promising student who could have made a mark' on the field of forensic psychology - refused to believe he could be capable of killing, even after his arrest. But as she investigated the case more, Ramsland began to believe he may be responsible and was forced to ask herself a tough question. 'I have to look at the framework of what I taught and wonder: Did I inspire him?' she said. Ramsland continues her studies and teaching students, but accepts she must avoid the possibility the influence of his education, explaining 'unfortunately, in this field, that's what we live with.' She admits that given her research into the minds of the most vile of people, she knows a rare few of her students may turn out this way. 'We know that there's always a risk that we're attracting somebody that's going to do something terrible,' she revealed. 'I know, everyone in this field know that we could have students who might become offenders but we also know the vast majority of our students will not and will go into a field like law enforcement that will make the world better,' she added. Despite her disgust, Ramsland - who wrote the literal book on BTK killer, Confession of a Serial Killer: The Untold Story of Dennis Rader, the BTK Killer - admits she's interested in potentially studying Kohberger to help better understand how he got away with it. 'This is my work. If he wanted to do that, I would,' she said, adding that the study would be to try and learn 'developmental trajectories' and 'red flags' so killers can be sussed out faster. 'If he wanted to do that, I know that he's got the intellectual capacity to do it, to be self-reflective. I would definitely do it if he were willing. It would be hard but I think because I have so much material for him, I have questions for him that I think nobody but me could ask.' Ramsland, who taught Kohberger courses ranging from an intro to forensic psychology to one titled 'Dangerous Minds: the psychology of anti-social behavior,' at first was skeptical her former student could be capable of such heinous acts. 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'Your viewpoints weighed heavily in our decision-making process, and we hope that you may come to appreciate why we believe this resolution is in the best interest of justice.' It was signed by Thompson and his deputy Ashley Jennings, and noted that Kohberger would be sentenced to life in prison in late July should he accept the plea deal on Wednesday. But if he does not plead as expected, the scheduled trial will continue as planned. After receiving the letter, the Goncalves family said they were left 'scrambling'. 'We immediately jumped into panic mode and started making phone calls and sending emails,' they said in a statement. 'We met with prosecution today to reiterate our views on pushing for the death penalty. 'Unfortunately all of our efforts did not matter,' the family lamented, claiming they had been 'branded adversaries' after they questioned the police investigation into the students' stabbing deaths. 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She claimed the prosecutors were especially concerned that the families would have to see gruesome crime scene photos of their loved ones - though Kernodle said, 'We know the graphics. They were not trying to spare us.' Kernodle also claimed that prosecutors did not mention they were taking death penalty off the table when they met on Friday, when she said prosecutors acknowledged they have enough evidence to secure a guilty verdict. The State has previously laid out how Kohberger purchased a balaclava from Dick's Sporting Goods store months before the savage murders inside the victims' off-campus home. Surviving housemate Dylan Mortensen later told police she saw a man wearing 'the same kind of mask' during the crime spree. She also described seeing a man with 'bushy eyebrows' - which fit Kohberger's appearance. 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By 4.07am, the vehicle came back drove by once again - then didn't come back into view until 4.20am, when it was seen speeding off. During that 13-minute window, sources close to the investigation told NBC's Dateline that Kohberger went directly upstairs to Mogen's bedroom, where he allegedly killed her and Goncalves. He is accused of the turning his attention to Kernodle on his way back out the house, killing her as she was up ordering food, and then targeting her boyfriend, Chapin, whom Kohberger allegedly 'carved'. Meanwhile, data from Kohberger's phone indicate he turned it off before 3am that morning, and when he apparently turned it back on at around 4.48am, it connected with a cellphone tower south of Moscow. But the phone also appeared to be briefly back in the city shortly after 9am, when Kohberger reportedly returned to his apartment in Pullman, Washington, where he took a chilling selfie, giving the thumbs up pose in a bathroom mirror. 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