'Bike Path Rapist' admits to additional rapes
Published: Friday, August 10, 2007
BUFFALO, N.Y. - A man dubbed the "Bike Path Rapist" who was convicted of murdering three women has admitted to raping between 12 and 15 other women in the Buffalo area since 1979, his attorney said Thursday.
Altemio Sanchez can't be prosecuted for the additional rapes because the statute of limitations prevents it.
DNA evidence had already connected Sanchez to at least eight more rapes in the Buffalo area between 1981 and 1994, prosecutors said.
Sanchez, 49, met with Erie County Deputy District Attorney Frank A. Sedita III and several investigators to tell them about the unsolved rapes, defense attorney Andrew LoTempio said.
"There is apparently another side to Sanchez that prompted him to come forward to give those other women sense of closure," LoTempio said.
Sedita could not be reached for comment and District Attorney Frank Clark would not confirm the meeting.
"There's a sentencing coming Tuesday, and I'm going to allow nothing to upstage the sentencing for the murder of three women," Clark said.
Sanchez admitted to five rapes in Delaware Park, a number of rapes in the Riverside and Black Rock sections near railroad tracks or in deserted areas, one near Ralph Wilson Stadium in Orchard Park and one near Frontier Central High School in Hamburg, LoTempio said.
Sanchez also admitted to one other rape on the same Ellicott Creek Trailway in Amherst where he raped and killed Linda Yalem in 1990, LoTempio said.
Clark said a laboratory analyzed 15 slides that the Erie County Medical Center provided to the Bike Path Rape Task Force. Of those, the hospital confirmed eight were connected to Sanchez by DNA.
Another man served 22 years in prison for two rapes that are now tied through DNA to Sanchez. Anthony Capozzi's convictions were erased earlier this year.
Sanchez was arrested after investigators reviewed a 1981 victim's report that included her attacker's license plate number. The car belonged to Sanchez's uncle, who had said at the time that the car had not been driven.
Twenty-six years later, the uncle said his nephew had borrowed the car. Investigators then followed Sanchez and secretly collected his DNA from drinking glasses at a restaurant in January. He was arrested two days later.
Sanchez faces 75 years to life in prison at sentencing Aug. 2.
Information from: The Buffalo News,
http://www.buffalonews.com
A service of the Associated Press(AP)