Los Angeles Times

Assailant gets 115 years to life

Anaheim man used badge and gun to trick women he assaulted, prosecutor­s say.

- By Alene Tchekmedyi­an alene.tchekmedyi­an@latimes.com Twitter: @AleneTchek

A man is sentenced for assaulting women while he posed as a police officer.

When he approached the women, Christoph Moore lied and said he was a police detective working an investigat­ion.

He flashed a badge and, in two cases, a gun.

But really, prosecutor­s said, the man was a registered sex offender with a history of violence. He had prior conviction­s for robbery and assault with intent to commit rape.

When two women followed his orders under his guise, authoritie­s said, he fondled them. In a third case, he forced the woman to take off her clothes.

This week, the 41-year-old Anaheim man was sentenced to 115 years to life in prison for his crimes, the Los Angeles County district attorney’s office said.

Moore was convicted of one count each of assault with intent to commit a sexual assault, criminal threats, grand theft, second-degree burglary and two counts of false imprisonme­nt by violence, the district attorney’s office said.

He was also convicted of four misdemeano­rs, including three counts of unlawful use of a badge and one count of sexual battery.

The first case was reported in October 2015. A woman was working at a store downtown when Moore walked in and identified himself as a detective, flashing a police identifica­tion card and badge, Deputy Dist. Atty. Lowrie Mendoza said.

He told the woman he needed to see her business papers and instructed her to lock the doors. He then ordered her into the bathroom, where he told her to take off her clothes, Mendoza said. When the woman refused, he brandished a handgun at his hip. She then followed his order.

Soon after, the woman’s ex-husband arrived and knocked on the doors, prompting the man to flee.

The next month, on two occasions less than a week apart, Moore stopped women in the Hollywood area while pretending to be a police officer and touched them inappropri­ately, prosecutor­s said.

A foreign exchange student was walking home when she gave a bag of chips to a homeless man. Shortly after, Moore approached her at her front door, flashed his badge and accused her of giving the man drugs, Mendoza said.

He ordered the woman to put her hands against a wall before grabbing her breasts. When she resisted, he pulled out his handgun and pointed it at her. The incident, Mendoza said, was captured by a surveillan­ce camera.

A few days later, Moore approached a woman who had just parked at her home in Hollywood, Mendoza said. He put a badge against the woman’s car window and told her she was missing registrati­on tags.

He ordered her out of the car and told her to put her hands against a wall, then groped her buttocks and thighs. During the interactio­n, he bumped into another car, Mendoza said, triggering the alarm. He fled.

Anonymous tipsters identified Moore after police released surveillan­ce video of the second incident. He was arrested at his home in December 2015, Mendoza said.

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