New York Post

RI ‘sex rap’ evader faked demise in ’20

- By GABRIELLE FONROUGE gfonrouge@nypost.com

A Rhode Island man who allegedly faked his death to evade charges of sex assault and fraud has reportedly been found alive in Scotland.

Nicholas Alahverdia­n, who also goes by the last name Rossi, supposedly died at age 32 in February 2020 from non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma but turned up last month at a Glasgow hospital, where he was on a ventilator for COVID-19, The Providence Journal reported Wednesday.

‘Arthur Knight’

Hospital staffers learned that Alahverdia­n, who was living under the name Arthur Knight, was wanted by Interpol only when authoritie­s turned up last month at the infirmary and arrested him, the Scottish Sun reported.

The fugitive was on the run from criminal charges in Utah and Ohio, and faked his death so he could avoid prosecutio­n, the Utah County Attorney’s Office told The Providence Journal.

“He has been taken into custody, and the Utah County Attorney’s Office is working with federal and internatio­nal agencies to extradite Mr. Rossi back to Utah,” the agency said in a statement.

Alahverdia­n is suspected in a number of sexual-assault cases in Utah and throughout the US and is also accused of bilking his former foster mother in Ohio out of $200,000 and ex-wife Kathryn Heckendorn out of $60,000, the news outlet reported.

Weeks before his “death” in February 2020, Alahverdia­n urged Rhode Island reporters to write about his impending demise, asserting that his work crusading for reform of the child-welfare system made it newsworthy, the outlet said.

Obits of praise

When the journalist­s failed to write about it, he grew angry, the outlet said.

An obituary written about Alahverdia­n’s “death” called him a “warrior” for children and stated his last words were, “Fear not and run toward the bliss of the sun.”

A person who claimed to be his wife asked lawmakers to participat­e in elaborate memorials of his life, but the plans were squashed when word spread that Alahverdia­n was potentiall­y still alive.

“At first I didn’t believe it,” Heckendorn told the outlet of the moment a Utah public safety official called to tell her Alahverdia­n had been captured.

“I said this has to be Nick; he probably hired someone to get in touch with me to scope out the situation, because that’s the very special kind of deception he would do.”

Alahverdia­n is facing extraditio­n proceeding­s in the UK, but it’s unclear when he will be brought back stateside.

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