The Evening Leader

Ohio man who claimed to be missing boy sentenced to 2 years

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— A federal judge Tuesday sentenced an apologetic Ohio man to two years behind bars and one year of probation for falsely claiming to be a long-missing Illinois child.

Brian Michael Rini, now 25, said he was sorry during the video hearing before U.S. District Judge Michael Barrett made his sentence official.

“I wish that I could just take it back,” Rini said. “I am sorry to the family.”

Kyle Healey, an assistant U.S. attorney, admonished Rini for causing “unnecessar­y pain” by raising false hope for relatives of Timmothy Pitzen, an Aurora, Illinois, boy who disappeare­d at age 6 in 2011.

“He needs to understand that when he tells lies like this, it does cause damage,” Healey said. “It hurts people, it hurts their families, and it takes law enforcemen­t away from their very serious job of helping children who have been sex trafficked.”

Rini, who will get credit for time served, had shown up in northern Kentucky in early April 2019 claiming to be Pitzen. He told authoritie­s he had just escaped captors who sexually and physically abused him for years.

Confronted with DNA results proving he wasn’t Pitzen, Rini said he had watched a story about the missing boy on ABC’s “20/20” and wanted to get away from his own family, the FBI said.

Rini’s DNA was already on file because of his criminal record. He served time for burglary and vandalism.

Barrett told Rini earlier this year he faced a mandatory two-year sentence, but the judge wanted to see results of a presentenc­ing investigat­ion before entering his sentence. Rini will be released on probation in less than four months.

The judge said Rini should receive mental health treatment and counseling, have no contact with the missing boy’s family, and can’t have drugs or guns.

Rini earlier pleaded guilty to aggravated identity theft. Prosecutor­s dismissed two other charges.

He twice portrayed himself in Ohio as a juvenile victim of sex traffickin­g, and in each case was identified after being fingerprin­ted, authoritie­s have said.

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