Los Angeles Times

Life sentence in 2018 killing of student in Iowa

- By Ryan J. Foley Foley writes for the Associated Press.

IOWA CITY, Iowa — A man was sentenced to life in prison without parole Monday in the abduction and killing of University of Iowa student Mollie Tibbetts, three years after she disappeare­d while out for an evening run.

Judge Joel Yates’ sentence for Cristhian Bahena Rivera was mandatory for a first-degree murder conviction in Iowa, which does not have the death penalty. The 27-year-old former farmhand, who testified that he came to the U.S. illegally from Mexico as a teenager, has been jailed since his arrest in August 2018.

Yates pointedly rejected defense claims that others were responsibl­e for the crime.

“Mr. Bahena Rivera, you and you alone forever changed the lives of those who loved Mollie Tibbetts,” he said.

The sentence capped a case that inflamed anger over illegal immigratio­n, fueled fears about violence against solo female runners, and took several noteworthy twists during and after Bahena Rivera’s trial in May.

Tibbetts’ mother, Laura Calderwood, addressed Bahena Rivera in a victim impact statement read to the court.

“Mollie was a young woman who simply wanted to go for a quiet run on the evening of July 18 and you chose to violently and sadistical­ly end that life,” she wrote.

Calderwood recalled being told by tearful investigat­ors that the body of her 20year-old daughter had been found, and racing to inform relatives before they learned the news from the media. The hardest conversati­on was with Mollie’s grandmothe­r, who was in disbelief that someone “could harm such a beautiful, vibrant young woman so full of promise,” she said.

She said the killing caused Latino workers to flee the area in fear, prevented Mollie’s boyfriend from being able to give her the engagement ring he had purchased, and meant her father would never walk his only daughter down the aisle.

“Because of your actions, Mr. Rivera, I will never get to see my daughter become a mother,” Calderwood said.

Tibbetts vanished on a rural road outside her hometown of Brooklyn, Iowa, population 1,700, while out for a run on July 18, 2018. Family members and coworkers feared something was wrong when Tibbetts did not show up for her summer job at a day care the next morning.

Hundreds of volunteers and law enforcemen­t officers searched for weeks but came up empty. Investigat­ors began focusing on Bahena Rivera, who worked under an alias at a nearby dairy farm, after finding a homeowner’s surveillan­ce video that appeared to show his Chevy Malibu repeatedly driving past Tibbetts while she ran.

After a lengthy interrogat­ion, Bahena Rivera led authoritie­s to a cornfield where he had buried Tibbetts’ body under leaves and stalks. Only her bright running shoes were visible. An autopsy found she had been stabbed several times.

Bahena Rivera told investigat­ors that he approached Tibbetts because he found her attractive, and that he fought her after she threatened to call the police. He said he then blacked out and came to as he was driving with her body in his trunk.

Prosecutor­s suggested Bahena Rivera had a sexual motive, noting Tibbetts was wearing only socks and a sports bra and that her legs were spread when her body was found. They built their case around the surveillan­ce video, his partial confession and DNA evidence of Tibbetts’ blood in his trunk.

“Based upon the facts and circumstan­ces of this case, it is very well-deserved,” prosecutor Scott Brown said of the life sentence.

Bahena Rivera’s lawyers argued that his confession was false and coerced, and their client gave surprise testimony at trial sharing a different account. Bahena Rivera testified that two masked men kidnapped him from his trailer at gunpoint, made him drive while they attacked Tibbetts, instructed him on where to dispose of her body, and told him to stay quiet or that his young daughter and ex-girlfriend would be killed.

The defense sought to cast suspicion on several others, including Tibbetts’ boyfriend and a local deputy who lives next to where Tibbetts’ body was found.

Prosecutor­s called Bahena Rivera’s testimony a work of fiction, and a unanimous 12-member jury found him guilty.

But two people immediatel­y came forward to tell police that a 21-year-old man with a history of violence had confessed to them that he had killed Tibbetts. Separately, a woman had told police she was kidnapped after meeting an alleged sex trafficker at a Brooklyn gas station weeks before Tibbetts’ disappeara­nce.

Yates delayed a July sentencing so the defense had time to investigat­e. Earlier this month, he denied Bahena Rivera’s motion for a new trial, saying the new informatio­n was unreliable and he saw no reason to overturn the verdict.

The defense plans to appeal. Bahena Rivera and his defense lawyers, Chad and Jennifer Frese, declined to speak at sentencing.

 ?? Charlie Neibergall Associated Press ?? CRISTHIAN Bahena Rivera was sentenced to life in prison for the 2018 stabbing death of Mollie Tibbetts.
Charlie Neibergall Associated Press CRISTHIAN Bahena Rivera was sentenced to life in prison for the 2018 stabbing death of Mollie Tibbetts.

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