Unpacking claim Utah lawmaker suggested change in age of consent law as relative faced child rape charges

State Senate President J. Stuart Adams suggested to another lawmaker he should look into the law, according to a report from The Salt Lake Tribune.

  • According to an article published in The Salt Lake Tribune, Utah state Senate President J. Stuart Adams inspired a change in state law that reduced the penalty for cases in which an 18-year-old still enrolled in high school has “consensual” sex with a 13-year-old.

  • At the time the law was changed, Adams reportedly had an 18-year-old relative facing charges of child rape for having sex with a 13-year-old. Although Snopes couldn’t independently confirm Adams’ relationship to the individual, he didn’t deny the individual was related to him in public interviews about the case.

  • Some social media posts claimed that the change “loosened” the age of sexual consent, which is inaccurate — the age of consent in Utah was and still is 18, and the law only altered the charge for the criminal act.

  • The law wasn’t retroactive, meaning Adams’ relative still faced the original charges of child rape, not a reduced charge. However, the judge, prosecutor and defense attorney in Adams’ relative’s case reportedly all agreed that the legislative change did impact how the charges were resolved in the relative’s plea deal.

On Aug. 2, 2025, The Salt Lake Tribune published an article, titled, “Utah’s Senate president prompted law change that helped a teen charged with child rape.” The article claimed that state Senate President J. Stuart Adams, a Republican, made the initial suggestion that led to a recent change in Utah’s child rape penalty, and that Adams had an 18-year-old relative charged with child rape who was indirectly helped by the law’s change.

The claim went viral on social media, and Snopes readers wrote in and searched the site asking for more information about it. As part of researching this story, we reached out to Adams and the senator who introduced the bill, Kirk Cullimore. We also contacted the journalist who wrote the Salt Lake Tribune article. At the time of publishing, we had not heard back from any of them.

Clear information was somewhat difficult to find, as the allegation stemmed solely from the Salt Lake Tribune article. The paper also elected to not publish the name or gender of Adams’ purported 18-year-old relative, meaning that Snopes could not independently confirm Adams’ relationship to the individual. As a result, there isn’t enough information to include a rating on this article.

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However, some versions of the claim shared on social media inaccurately reported the situation. Here’s what we do know:

The change lessened a penalty but ‘age of consent’ law didn’t change

Some social media posts described the legislation as a change in “age of consent law.” However, that’s somewhat misleading.

A statement from Adams available on the Utah Senate website pointed this out:

Contrary to fabricated and baseless claims, the law is not retroactive, does not alter the legal age of consent and does not apply to incidents of rape, aggravated sexual assault or offenses involving force, coercion or threats.

The age of sexual consent in Utah is 18. Under state law, any child under the age of 14 cannot legally consent to any form of sexual activity. Any adult having sex with a child under the age of 14 is committing a first-degree felony punishable by a minimum of 25 years in prison and must register as a sex offender. (Teenagers between the ages of 14 and 17 can legally consent in some, but not all, circumstances, according to The Salt Lake Tribune).

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In 2017, the Utah legislature created exceptions to that law for cases where two youths, one of whom was either 12 or 13 years old, “mutually consented” to the sexual activity. The exceptions, which reduce the criminal charges based on the ages of the two participants, cannot be applied to situations involving “rape,” “object rape,” “forcible sodomy,” “aggravated sexual assault,” [or] incest.”

Those exception charges, in order of lowest severity to highest severity, are:

  • Class C misdemeanor: any 12- and 13-year-old with each other, or a 14-year-old with a 13-year-old

  • Class B misdemeanor: a 17-year-old with a 14- or 15-year-old, or a 15-year-old with a 13-year-old

  • Class A misdemeanor: a 16-year-old with a 13-year-old, or a 14- or 15-year-old with a 12-year-old.

  • Third-degree felony: a 17-year-old with a 12- or 13-year-old, or a 16-year-old with a 12-year-old.

The provision in S.B. 213 that Adams supposedly influenced extended the third-degree felony charge to include cases in which an 18-year-old still enrolled in high school and 13-year-old had mutually consensual sex.

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The change, therefore, did not alter consent laws — the age of consent in Utah is still 18. Children under the age of 14 still cannot legally consent, meaning that a teen under the age of 18 who has sex with a 13-year-old is still doing something the state deems illegal.

The case against Adams’ relative

According to The Salt Lake Tribune, an 18-year-old relative of Adams was charged with having sex with a 13-year-old. Since the individual was a legal adult, the state charged the defendant with two counts of child rape and two counts of child sodomy, all of which are first-degree felonies.

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The article claimed that “plea bargain negotiations were at an impasse” in the case when the law was changed. Sen. Kirk Cullimore, who introduced the legislation that changed the law, told the newspaper that Adams explained the charges against the relative and asked Cullimore to look into the law.

Reportedly, Cullimore consulted several criminal lawyers about changing the law, including Cara Tangaro, the attorney defending Adams’ relative. According to Cullimore, Tangaro told him that the prosecutor in Adams’ relative’s case was not “consider[ing] the circumstances and offer[ing] pleas.”

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So he asked her what the ideal scenario would be. Cullimore claimed that Tangaro drafted the language that would allow for the lower-level felony charge, and that neither he nor Adams intended for the law to retroactively apply to the case against Adams’ relative.

Adams said in a statement to the Tribune that he “did not request the legislation and did not intervene or give input on the drafting of the bill.” Voting records showed that he did not vote on the bill except to adopt an amendment introduced in the House that did not affect the aforementioned change. 

The bill did not apply retroactively, meaning that the 18-year-old did not face the fully reduced charge once the bill was signed into law. 

However, the judge, prosecutor and defense attorney all agreed that the legislative change did impact how the charges were resolved, according to the Salt Lake Tribune. The parties reached a plea deal that required the 18-year-old to plead guilty to aggravated assault (a second-degree felony) and three counts of sexual battery (a class A misdemeanor) instead of the two child rape and child sodomy charges.

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Crucially, those reduced charges did not require the 18-year-old to register as a sex offender, which the article reported was a sticking point for the prosecutors. The judge “ordered the teen to serve four years on probation, complete sex offender treatment, pay a $1,500 fine and perform 120 hours of community service,” according to the article. 

Sources:

Criminal Penalties. https://www.utcourts.gov/en/self-help/case-categories/criminal-justice/penalties.html. Accessed 11 Aug. 2025.

“GOP Lawmaker Changes Law to Help Relative Facing Child Rape Charges.” The New Republic. The New Republic, https://newrepublic.com/post/198855/republican-lawmaker-consent-child-rape-law-relative-charges. Accessed 11 Aug. 2025.

“Here’s What Utah Law Says about Minors Having Sex and When They Can Consent.” The Salt Lake Tribune, https://www.sltrib.com/news/politics/2025/08/04/heres-what-utah-law-says-about/. Accessed 11 Aug. 2025.

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KUTV, Jared Turner. “Utah Senate Leader Denies Influencing Law for Family amid Resignation Calls.” KUTV, 9 Aug. 2025, https://kutv.com/news/politics/utah-senate-leader-denies-influencing-law-for-family-amid-resignation-calls.

President J. Stuart Adams Addresses False Information | Utah Senate. https://senate.utah.gov/president-j-stuart-adams-addresses-false-information/. Accessed 11 Aug. 2025.

SB0213. https://le.utah.gov/~2024/bills/static/SB0213.html. Accessed 11 Aug. 2025.

Senator | Utah Senate. https://senate.utah.gov/sen/CULLIKA/. Accessed 11 Aug. 2025.

—. https://senate.utah.gov/sen/ADAMSJS/. Accessed 11 Aug. 2025.

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Utah Code Section 76-5-401.3. https://le.utah.gov/xcode/Title76/Chapter5/76-5-S401.3.html. Accessed 11 Aug. 2025.

Utah Code Section 76-5-402.1. https://le.utah.gov/xcode/Title76/Chapter5/76-5-S402.1.html. Accessed 11 Aug. 2025.

“Utah’s Senate President Prompted Law Change That Helped a Teen Charged with Child Rape.” The Salt Lake Tribune, https://www.sltrib.com/news/politics/2025/08/02/utah-senate-pres-stuart-adams/. Accessed 11 Aug. 2025.

Source: Utah News

Man accused of faking his death to avoid rape charges is found guilty of sexual assault in Utah

A Rhode Island man accused of faking his death and fleeing the United States to evade rape charges has been found guilty of sexually assaulting a former girlfriend in his first of two Utah trials.

A Rhode Island man accused of faking his death and fleeing the United States to evade rape charges has been found guilty of sexually assaulting a former girlfriend in his first of two Utah trials.

In this image made from pool video footage, Nicholas Rossi accused of faking his death and fleeing to Europe to avoid rape charges, appears at a jury trial in Salt Lake City, Monday, Aug. 11, 2025. (Firecrest Films via AP, Pool)

3 minute read

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SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — A Rhode Island man accused of faking his death and fleeing the United States to evade rape charges was found guilty Wednesday of sexually assaulting a former girlfriend in his first of two Utah trials.

A jury in Salt Lake County found Nicholas Rossi guilty of a 2008 rape after a three-day trial in which his accuser and her parents took the stand. The verdict came hours after Rossi, 38, declined to testify on his own behalf. He will be sentenced in the case on Oct. 20 and is set to stand trial in September for another rape charge in Utah County.

First-degree felony rape carries a punishment in Utah of five years to life in prison, said Salt Lake County District Attorney Sim Gill.

“We are grateful to the survivor in this case for her willingness to come forward, years after this attack took place,” Gill said in a statement Wednesday night. “We appreciate her patience as we worked to bring the defendant back to Salt Lake County so that this trial could take place and she could get justice. It took courage and bravery to take the stand and confront her attacker to hold him accountable.”

Utah authorities began searching for Rossi, whose legal name is Nicholas Alahverdian, when he was identified through a decade-old DNA rape kit in 2018. He was among thousands of rape suspects identified and later charged when the state made a push to clear its rape kit backlog.

Months after he was charged in Utah County, an online obituary claimed Rossi had died on Feb. 29, 2020, of late-stage non-Hodgkin lymphoma. But police in his home state of Rhode Island, along with his former lawyer and a former foster family, cast doubt on whether he was dead. He was arrested in Scotland the following year while receiving treatment for COVID-19 after hospital staff in Glasgow recognized his distinctive tattoos from an Interpol notice.

Rossi was extradited to Utah in January 2024 while insisting he was an Irish orphan named Arthur Knight who was being framed. Investigators say they identified at least a dozen aliases Rossi used over the years to evade capture.

He appeared in court this week in a wheelchair, wearing a suit and tie and using an oxygen tank.

Throughout the trial, prosecutors painted a picture of an intelligent man who used his charm to take advantage of a vulnerable young woman. She was living with her parents and recovering from a traumatic brain injury when she responded to a personal ad Rossi posted on Craigslist. They began dating and were engaged within about two weeks.

On Monday, the woman described being asked to pay for their dates, cover Rossi’s car repairs, lend him $1,000 so he wouldn’t be evicted from his apartment and take on debt to buy their engagement rings. He grew hostile soon after their engagement and raped her in his bedroom one night after she drove him home, she testified.

The woman said dismissive comments from her parents convinced her not to go to the police at the time. She came forward a decade later after she saw him in the news and learned he was accused of another rape from the same year.

Rossi’s lawyers sought to convince the jury that his accuser built up years of resentment after he made her foot the bill for everything in their monthlong relationship. They argued she accused him of rape to get back at him years later when he was getting media attention.

Attorneys for Rossi did not immediately respond to emails seeking comment after the verdict Wednesday night.

Rossi’s accuser in the Utah County case did, however, go to the police at the time. She took the stand Tuesday to testify about her own experiences with Rossi — though he will not stand trial for that rape charge until next month.

Rossi is accused of attacking the second woman, another former girlfriend, at his apartment in Orem in September 2008 after she came over to collect money she said he stole from her to buy a computer. When police initially interviewed Rossi, he claimed she had raped him and threatened to have him killed.

Rossi grew up in foster homes in Rhode Island and had returned there before allegedly faking his death. He was previously wanted in the state for failing to register as a sex offender. The FBI has said he also faces fraud charges in Ohio, where he was convicted of sex-related charges in 2008.

Source: Utah News

Record homelessness in Utah renews clash between state and Salt Lake City officials

Utah Gov. Spencer Cox lauded the move, ordering the Utah Homeless Services Board, which includes Salt Lake City Mayor Erin Mendenhall, to “fulfill the President’s executive order and uphold public …

The number of homeless Utahns surged to its highest level ever in 2025 as state leadership continues to debate how to balance enhanced law enforcement and increased funding for an expanded shelter system.

Nearly 4,600 Utahns were recorded as homeless during the annual 2025 Point-in-Time Count conducted the final weekend of January, representing an 18% increase from 2024 and the largest number on record.

“We had a huge increase in homelessness,” State Homeless Coordinator Wayne Niederhauser told the Deseret News. “But we’ve been effective in responding to it.”

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The sobering news comes as the nation also reaches record rates of homelessness. On Monday, President Donald Trump federalized the Washington, D.C., police department at least in part in an effort to crack down on the city’s homeless encampments.

At the end of July, Trump issued an executive order overturning the government’s “housing first” approach to homelessness and instructing agencies to remove obstacles for states to place homeless individuals into long-term institutional care if they pose a risk to themselves or others.

Utah Gov. Spencer Cox lauded the move, ordering the Utah Homeless Services Board, which includes Salt Lake City Mayor Erin Mendenhall, to “fulfill the President’s executive order and uphold public safety” in a letter joined by Utah Senate President Stuart Adams and House Speaker Mike Schultz.

In Utah, nearly half of the increase in homelessness was driven by growth in the chronically homeless population — defined as those who have spent at least a year on the streets with a disability, mental illness or drug addiction.

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The total number of Utahns experiencing chronic homelessness increased by 36% since 2024, from 906 to 1,233. The number of homeless children increased by 12%, from 589 to 662. And the number of homeless seniors over 64 increased by 42% from 251 to 356.

There is a “silver lining” in the data, according to Niederhauser: 95% of the increase was among homeless individuals in shelters — a reversal from the year before when 82% of the growth in homelessness was unsheltered.

This is an indication the state’s investment in winter emergency shelters is helping keep Utahns off the street, according to Niederhauser. But the overall increase — the largest jump in recent memory — points to the need for a new approach.

Why did homelessness shoot up?

SLC Homelessness Presser_tc_001.JPG

Salt Lake City Mayor Erin Mendenhall and Salt Lake City Police Department Chief Brian Redd address the media following the release of the Utah Office of Homeless Services 2025 Annual Report outside City Hall in Salt Lake City on Wednesday, Aug. 13, 2025. | Tess Crowley, Deseret News

Utah’s record amount of homelessness in 2025 increased the per capita rate to 13 per 10,000 people compared to the previous rate of around 10 or 11 per 10,000. This is still significantly below the national average of 23.

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In its annual report published Wednesday, the Utah Office of Homeless Services attributed the rise in homelessness to a rapidly growing population that has outpaced the supply of affordable housing and access to behavioral health services.

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The increase also follows an unprecedented spike in fentanyl being trafficked through the state. Between 2020 and 2024, the quantity of fentanyl seized in Utah increased 95-fold — with interdictions in 2025 nearly overtaking the prior year’s record before May.

“The data is clear. There is an overlap between the drugs, the transient-related crime and violent crime,” Salt Lake City Police Chief Brian Redd told the Deseret News. “There is a connection to those things.”

Around two-thirds of Utah’s homeless population lives in the Salt Lake City area, according to the Office of Homeless Services.

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On Wednesday, Redd and Mendenhall held a press conference outside City Hall to send a message to the governor and legislative leadership about where responsibility lies for the growing problem.

Wednesday’s report “should be heard as a battle cry,” Mendenhall said, spurring action at the Utah Capitol to fully fund services and shelter space to prevent homelessness, encourage treatment and keep Utahns off of the streets.

“We need our state leaders to prioritize the resources to get this done,” Mendenhall said. “So to Gov Cox, President Adams and Speaker Schultz, I’m calling on our state leadership to create a sea change that we need to address an issue that impacts all Utahns and just increased by 18%.”

In December, Cox; Adams, R-Layton; and Schultz, R-Hooper; sent a strongly worded letter to Mendenhall that called for the city to find solutions to “eliminate crime and restore public safety” or have the Legislature step in.

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Mendenhall subsequently provided a public safety plan with 27 recommendations that revolved around remaking city law enforcement and another 23 requests relying on state partners to help close the gap in homeless beds and the criminal justice system.

Since Redd has taken over as police chief, the department has taken “enforcement as far as we can,” answering a record number of 911 calls with a record number of yearly arrests, contributing to a 16-year-low in crime, Mendenhall said.

The largest obstacle to changing “the trajectory of homelessness in Utah,” Mendenhall said, isn’t Salt Lake’s willingness to crack down on crime, it’s the Legislature’s commitment to invest in long-term solutions, like funding the so-called “transformative campus” touted by Cox and lawmakers.

“I’m extremely concerned by the lack of forward momentum from legislative leaders,” Mendenhall said. “Salt Lake City is making good on our part, but the reality is, this is a humanitarian crisis, this is not something that we can police our way out of.”

State leaders push back on Mendenhall

Cox, Adams and Schultz pushed back against Mendenhall on Wednesday. Since Utah’s homeless numbers began climbing in 2020, the state has invested more than $266 million on addressing homelessness, they said.

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This level of direct state investment is rare; most states delegate homelessness policy to cities and counties. Cox, Adams and Schultz said the Utah Governor’s Office and Legislature remain committed to helping municipal and private-sector partners “find real solutions.”

The overhaul to city law enforcement under Redd has been an encouraging sign, the leaders said. Mendenhall agreed the city and state must work closer together to address homelessness concerns before the Salt Lake City Temple open house in 2027 and the Olympic Winter Games in 2034.

“The city needs to stay focused on its core responsibility of protecting its citizens, keeping streets safe and clean and making our capital a place Utahns can be proud of and visitors want to experience,” Cox, Adams and Schultz said.

“We urge Mayor Mendenhall to turn down the politics and keep working with us to find practical and lasting solutions to this complex issue. Our citizens expect results, not finger-pointing.”

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During the 2025 legislative session, Utah lawmakers approved, and Cox signed into law, $3.9 million in ongoing funding to launch a second family shelter in Salt Lake County, $5.5 million in one-time funding to expand emergency cold-weather shelter operations statewide and $16.7 million to shore up public resources in shelter cities.

Will lawmakers fund the planned shelter?

The session prior, the Legislature appropriated $25 million to buy land and construct the future backbone of the state’s homelessness response: a 30-acre campus with 1,200-1,600 beds and an integrated system of treatment resources and recovery programs on site.

Niederhauser said they are still investigating several potential properties for the campus. But many of them, including an area near the Salt Lake City Airport that the Legislature made available for eminent domain, require wetland studies that will take several more weeks to apply for, and several months to complete through the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.

The priority for Niederhauser’s office going into the 2026 legislative session is appropriations to fully fund the construction of the facility because the $25 million they received “isn’t going to be sufficient to do it all,” Niederhauser said.

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But Niederhauser said they won’t put “$25-50 million of infrastructure on the ground” until the Legislature has decided whether it is willing to set aside the necessary annual funding to make the campus functional, “which is going to be a very large number.”

It currently costs the state $15-$20 million to fund the shelter beds that are available, Niederhauser said. And a campus that is actually intended to model operations like Haven For Hope homelessness campus in San Antonio, Texas, could cost twice that much every year.

“We’re obviously going to need to have additional funding for the campus, and that’ll be a high priority for us,” Niederhauser said. “That would probably be our focus.”

In the meantime before the campus is completed, Niederhauser said the Legislature can appropriate funding to keep the 1,100 winter beds available past April so providers aren’t forced to release “hundreds of additional people to sleep on the street” each spring.

Source: Utah News

Rhode Island man accused of faking his death to avoid rape charges is found guilty of sexual assault in Utah

A jury in Salt Lake County found Nicholas Rossi guilty of a 2008 rape after a three-day trial in which his accuser and her parents took the stand.

SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — A Rhode Island man accused of faking his death and fleeing the United States to evade rape charges was found guilty Wednesday of sexually assaulting a former girlfriend in his first of two Utah trials.

A jury in Salt Lake County found Nicholas Rossi guilty of a 2008 rape after a three-day trial in which his accuser and her parents took the stand. The verdict came hours after Rossi, 38, declined to testify on his own behalf. He will be sentenced in the case on Oct. 20 and is set to stand trial in September for another rape charge in Utah County.

An obituary published online claimed Rossi had died on Feb. 29, 2020, of late-stage non-Hodgkin lymphoma. But police in his home state of Rhode Island, along with his former lawyer and a former foster family, cast doubt on whether he was dead. He was arrested in Scotland the following year while receiving treatment for COVID-19 after hospital staff in Glasgow recognized his distinctive tattoos from an Interpol notice.

He was extradited to Utah in January 2024 after losing an extradition appeal in which he claimed he was an Irish orphan named Arthur Knight who was being framed.

Source: Utah News

Trial begins in Utah for a man accused of faking his death to avoid rape charges

A man accused of faking his death and fleeing to the United Kingdom to avoid rape charges faced an alleged victim in court Monday as a jury trial in Utah began.


Salt Lake City
AP
 — 

A man accused of faking his death and fleeing to the United Kingdom to avoid rape charges faced an alleged victim in court Monday as a jury trial in Utah began.

The man known in the US as Nicholas Rossi, whose legal name is Nicholas Alahverdian, is accused of sexually assaulting two women in Utah in 2008. He has pleaded not guilty to the charges. Prosecutors are trying the cases separately, with the first set in Salt Lake County.

Rossi, 38, was arrested in Scotland in 2021 — a year after he was reported dead — when he was recognized at a Glasgow hospital while receiving treatment for COVID-19. He lost an extradition appeal after claiming he was an Irish orphan named Arthur Knight who had never set foot on American soil and was being framed.

Prosecutors say they have identified at least a dozen aliases Rossi used over the years to evade capture.

Rossi appeared in court in a wheelchair, wearing a suit and tie and using an oxygen tank. The alleged victim identified him from the witness stand, saying he’s “a little bit heavier, a little bit older” but mostly looks the same.

District Judge Barry Lawrence helped clarify for the jury some of the twists and turns of the case, explaining that different people may refer to Rossi by different names. The defense and prosecution agreed it’s factual that Rossi was in Utah in 2008 and had a relationship that year with the woman who testified.

Prosecutors painted a picture of an intelligent man who used his charm to take advantage of a vulnerable young woman. He raped her when she pushed back against his attempts to control her, said Deputy Salt Lake County District Attorney Brandon Simmons.

The woman, who the judge asked not be identified publicly, described a whirlwind relationship with Rossi that began in November 2008 while she was recovering from a traumatic brain injury. The two began dating after she responded to a personal ad Rossi posted on Craigslist and were engaged within about two weeks.

The woman described being asked to pay for their dates, cover Rossi’s rent so he wouldn’t be evicted from his apartment and take on debt to buy their engagement rings.

“I was a little bit more of a timid person back then, and so it was harder for me to stand up for myself,” she said.

The relationship spiraled quickly after their engagement, with Rossi “becoming controlling and saying mean things to me,” she testified. The couple got into a fight in which Rossi pounded on her car and used his body to block her from pulling out of the parking garage. She finally let him inside and drove him home but said she had no plans of continuing a relationship.

She agreed to go into his house to talk, but he instead pushed her onto his bed, held her down and “forced me to have sex with him,” she testified. The woman described lying still, paralyzed with fear.

Dismissive comments from her parents convinced her not to go to the police at the time, she said. She did, however, try to bring Rossi to small claims court over the engagement rings but dropped the case.

Rossi’s lawyers sought to convince the jury that the alleged victim built up years of resentment after Rossi made her foot the bill for everything in their monthlong relationship, and accused him of rape to get back at him a decade later when she saw him in the news.

Rossi will also stand trial in September for another rape charge in Utah County.

Rossi grew up in foster homes in Rhode Island and had returned to the state before allegedly faking his death. An obituary published online claimed he died on Feb. 29, 2020, of late-stage non-Hodgkin lymphoma. State police, along with Rossi’s former lawyer and a former foster family, cast doubt on whether he was dead. A year later, hospital staff in Scotland recognized his tattoos from an Interpol notice and alerted authorities. He was extradited to Utah in January 2024.

“This case is like an old puzzle from the thrift store,” said MacKenzie Potter, one of Rossi’s attorneys. “It’s 13 years old, not all the pieces are there, some pieces are from a different puzzle. And when you start going through everything, you’re not going to get a complete picture.”

Prosecutors pushed back, saying that if any “puzzle pieces” are missing, it’s because Rossi’s attorneys fought to have some evidence dismissed.

Source: Utah News

2 Utah brothers try to outdo each other on ‘American Ninja Warrior’

As two of the speediest ninjas this season, Kai and Luke Beckstrand have been each other’s toughest competitors.

The “American Ninja Warrior” announcers never tire of saying it: Kai Beckstrand, a teenager from St. George, Utah, is one of the most formidable competitors on the show.

So far, throughout his Season 17 runs, the 19-year-old has been called “the ninja to beat” and “the fastest ninja on the planet.”

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He’s a favorite to win it all, and Monday night continued to make a strong case for that outcome.

Kai Beckstrand dominates in first round of ‘ANW’ finals

Sixty ninjas — including Kai and his younger brother, Luke — are competing in the Season 17 finals, which started Aug. 4 and continued Monday night.

In a new format, the show divided the 60 competitors into groups of four based on their runtimes. Ninjas in each group have to face off against each other in a series of one-on-one races. After everyone in a group has run against each other, the two competitors with the most wins advance to the next round.

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The new format plays to Kai Beckstrand’s advantage.

“Speed’s always been my favorite thing,” he previously told the Deseret News.

Source: Utah News

It’s primary Election Day in Utah: What you need to know

Tuesday is primary Election Day in Utah and here’s a look at what you need to know.

Tuesday is primary Election Day in Utah and here’s a look at what you need to know.

What races? There are a variety of municipal and school board elections taking place around the state this year. Not all of the elections taking place have a primary on Tuesday, due to either cities using ranked choice voting or there not being enough candidates to warrant a primary.

Multiple cities around Utah are having mayoral elections this year including Logan, Provo and St. George.

What’s new? It is too late for Utahns to send their ballots in by mail. According to HB300 passed by the state Legislature earlier this year, ballots have to be in possession of the county clerk by 8 p.m. on Election Day.

For those who haven’t mailed their ballots yet, they can still be submitted through their county’s drop boxes. There are drop box locations all around the state to find a location near you visit votesearch.utah.gov.

Voters can also cast their ballots in person at their county’s vote center. Polls will be open until 8 p.m.

For people who plan to vote in person they must provide a valid form of photo ID, such as a Utah driver license or a U.S. passport; tribal identification cards are also acceptable. If you don’t have one of those forms of identification you can also provide two other forms of identification that include your name and address.

For more information on how or where to vote, and what elections are taking place visit vote.utah.gov.

Source: Utah News

How a dog helped a Utah man survive an 11-hour night crawl through the Uintas

With two broken ankles, two broken ribs and a broken leg, Jake Schmitt wasn’t sure he could make it the five miles back to his truck after crashing his side-by-side in the high Uinta Mountains. His …

Ogden • Jake Schmitt looked up, droplets from the cool stream dribbling down his chin, and locked eyes with his best friend, Buddy. The 6-year-old German shorthaired pointer also had water dripping from his black snout.

Schmitt, 34, has been a hunter for most of his life and a hunting guide in Utah for almost a decade. He knew he shouldn’t be drinking from a stream, that his stomach could violently cramp from giardia once the water and parasites worked their way inside. But that was a tomorrow problem. He wasn’t even sure he would make it through the night — or if he would even notice the pain with so much of it already wracking his body.

It had been hours — four? eight? Schmitt wasn’t sure — since his Polaris Ranger had tumbled down a hillside deep in the Uinta Mountains. In the rollover, he shattered both ankles, two ribs and his leg. By the time they reached the river, he and Buddy had been crawling down a rutted logging road, both on all fours, for so long that while the reinforced patches on the knees of Schmitt’s hunting pants remained intact, the skin on his kneecaps was shredded and bleeding. He needed this respite. He could see Buddy needed it, too.

“We looked at each other, and I was like, ‘Dude, this water is so good.’ And he was like, ‘Yeah, can we just take a minute? This water is really good,’” Schmitt recalled. “And I was like, ’We can take five minutes, Buddy. I’m so sorry.’”

Schmitt had gotten them into this — what would end up being an 11-hour slog to his truck and another 40-minute drive to help. What got them out, he said, was Buddy.

‘I had everything you could imagine’

Before he moved to Ogden in 2022, Schmitt made an annual pilgrimage from his home in Buffalo, N.Y., out West to Montana or Canada or Utah every August to subcontract for four months as a hunting guide. And he always brought Buddy, who had been Schmitt’s sidekick since he was 8 weeks old.

With another hunting season around the corner, the pair took a Sunday drive toward Whitney Reservoir, deep into the Uinta Mountains, to scout for big game. It was July 20, and the trip was going well. Schmitt had rescued an elk fawn from a bear trap and also spotted a large buck. Trying to get a better look at the buck, Schmitt steered his Ranger onto a trail about four miles into the forest that he said he’s “been on a million times.”

(Christopher Cherrington | The Salt Lake Tribune)

Quickly, though, he realized the trail had become unsafe over the winter. He decided to backtrack and shifted the Ranger into reverse. Before he even put his foot on the accelerator, Schmitt felt the back end start to slip down the incline.

“I knew it was going to flip, and I tried to jump out,” Schmitt said. “And upon trying to jump out, it started to roll, and it took my body with it.”

Schmitt believes the machine rolled over him twice before it spit him out a quarter of the way down the steep hill. It rolled about 15 more times before coming to a rest in a heap in a dry creek bed. The frame was contorted. The roof had been ripped off. The tires were flung dozens of feet away.

Buddy had been inside a crate in the back of the Ranger. The crate was nowhere to be seen. But there Buddy was, standing in front of Schmitt, wagging his stubby tail, not a scratch on him.

Schmitt hadn’t been so fortunate.

Courtesy of Jake Schmitt

Jake Schmitt moved to Ogden, Utah three years ago to work as a hunting guide. He got his dog, a German shorthair pointer he named Buddy, as a puppy six years ago. The dog stuck by him throughout the 11 hours it took him to crawl from the high Uintas to his truck after he broke his leg and both ankles when his Polaris Ranger slid down a hill.

He didn’t know the extent of his injuries, but when he put weight on his right leg to stand, his ankle popped and he collapsed back to the ground. Then he looked at his left leg and couldn’t comprehend what he was seeing: His foot was folded back and his lower leg was skewed at a strange angle.

Even on healthy legs, it would have been difficult to stand on the incline. In his state, it would be impossible. So, Schmitt opted to roll down to the wreckage instead. Along the way, he hoped he would spot his satellite phone, or his radio or his cellphone, or at very least the gun he carried to scare away bears — anything he could use to signal for help.

“I had everything you could imagine,” he said. “But it doesn’t matter when it just gets flung off of you.”

The one usable thing he found? A small roll of duct tape. Through the tumult, it remained stuck inside the Ranger’s center console.

Schmitt sized up his situation: “I have no communication. I’m screwed. I’m going to have to drag myself out, as painful as that is.”

First, though, he had to set his broken leg.

The breaks

Schmitt wasn’t just some tourist lost in the woods. His years of guiding and backcountry exploration had left him uniquely qualified to deal with his perilous predicament.

He was so familiar with the old road that he knew he had to make six stream crossings before he would reach his truck. He knew to drink only from the most rapidly moving sections of those streams to mitigate the chances of contracting giardia. And, he had experience with self-administered wilderness first aid.

“If you don’t know how to literally drag yourself out at the end of the day, then probably don’t go out there,” Schmitt said, “because you’re going to die.”

Schmitt knew he needed to survive, even if only to make sure Buddy made it out alive. He found a straight piece of metal that had broken off the Ranger, scooted over to it and set his broken leg on top of it. Then, he pulled.

“I was way more scared to lose my leg than to rebreak that back,” Schmitt said of his rationalization for putting himself through that pain. “I was terrified.”

Courtesy of Jake Schmitt

Jake Schmitt’s pants are in tatters and wrapped in duct tape after he crawled for 11 hours from the high Uintas to his truck after he broke his leg and both ankles when his Polaris Ranger slid down a hill. He used the tape, a stick and his belt to splint his leg.

He created a splint with a mostly straight and sturdy stick and affixed it to the side of his leg with his belt and, of course, the duct tape.

By then, the sun had begun to set. So Schmitt called Buddy over and switched on the walnut-sized light on his collar. With just a crescent moon overhead, it would be their only light source for the next 10 hours as they lurched through the dark forest.

Crawling through the night

It didn’t take long for the adrenaline to wear off. Shock, fatigue and disorientation took its place.

Schmitt started the long journey to his truck by scooching backward, using his arms to drag his body down the road. Later, spooked by animal sounds he heard in the forest, he turned onto his belly and, with a rock in each hand for protection against the gravel and the wildlife, began to crawl. His ankle flopped helplessly behind him, and he could feel the bone shards grinding against one another. Ahead of him, Buddy zigzagged back and forth, picking up scents on the wind.

Their progress was glacial. At the second stream crossing, Schmitt convinced himself it was the fifth one. When a bend in the road jogged his memory, Schmitt broke down; they still had so far to travel.

They stopped often. Sometimes sleep would overtake Schmitt, but he would always be jolted back awake by the sensation of Buddy’s black nose nudging his head. When Schmitt felt like he just couldn’t go on, Buddy would lie down on the road 20 feet ahead of him. Compelled by the dog’s forlorn look, Schmitt would find the energy to scoot over to comfort his friend.

“I would pet him, and then he’d go 20 feet more,” Schmitt recalled. “And now I know he was just helping me, step by step.”

(Rick Egan | The Salt Lake Tribune) Jacob Schmitt with his dog Buddy, at his home in Ogden, on Thursday, July 31, 2025.

When daylight broke the next morning, Schmitt called it the “worst sunrise I’ve ever seen in my entire life.” It meant he hadn’t been crawling for three or four hours, like he’d thought, but closer to 10. The adrenaline kicked in, though, when the sunlight illuminated his truck in the distance.

Thankfully, he’d left his keys inside it.

An unexpected visitor

Yenni Saiz was putting yard games out in front of the Oakley Diner, as the 19-year-old waitress usually does to prepare for the 8 a.m. breakfast crowd, when the mud-colored Toyota pulled up next to her. The man inside rolled down his window, and Saiz grew nervous.

“You can tell he was in pain,” said Saiz, a Weber State student and Oakley resident, “and he had scratches on his face. He had a dog in the back seat, too.”

(Christopher Cherrington | The Salt Lake Tribune)

Schmitt had driven his broken body and best friend more than half an hour to the diner, the nearest place he thought might be open so early. He asked Saiz to call 911 and relayed to her the details of his ordeal and his injuries. Four minutes later, paramedics were on the scene.

Schmitt was loaded into an ambulance bound for Park City Hospital. Buddy had to stay behind. But the Oakley Fire Station kept him until Schmitt’s mom flew in the next day from New York to collect him.

(Rick Egan | The Salt Lake Tribune) Jacob Schmitt with his mother Mel and his dog Buddy, at his home in Ogden, on Thursday, July 31, 2025.

Schmitt spent a week in the hospital while doctors inserted a rod in his broken leg and gave his ribs time to heal. On his final day, the nurses gave Schmitt’s mom, Mel Lenz, who is also a nurse, the go-ahead to bring Buddy to the hospital. The dog could barely be restrained from climbing into bed with Schmitt.

“He cried. I cried,” Schmitt said. “It was pretty wild.”

Both are back at home in Ogden now. Schmitt, who is uninsured, is trying to distract himself from his mounting medical bills by managing his welding fabrication company and committing himself to his physical therapy. His ambitious goal is to be guiding again by early September.

As for Buddy, he has all the bones — and all the cool, clean water — a dog could want. And, Schmitt said, he always will.

“He’s the little man that got me out of there for sure,” Schmitt said. “If he wasn’t there, I probably wouldn’t have made it mentally, spiritually.”

A GoFundMe has been set up to help Schmitt pay for medical expenses and loss of equipment. As of Wednesday, the fund had received more than $20,000 in donations.

Note to readers • This story is available to Salt Lake Tribune subscribers only. Thank you for supporting local journalism.

Source: Utah News

3 way-too-early Utah Jazz trade candidates in 2025-26 season

Utah Jazz’s rebuild could move early-season veterans like Nurkic, Anderson, Love, as trade assets to ramp up draft capital and development.

The post 3 way-too-early Utah Jazz trade candidates in 2025-26 season appeared first on ClutchPoints.

The Utah Jazz made their intentions loud and clear this offseason: the rebuild is in full swing. Gone are the veterans who once formed the foundation of the locker room: Jordan Clarkson bought out, Collin Sexton shipped to Charlotte, and John Collins moved in a three-team deal to the Clippers. These weren’t subtle, cosmetic changes. They were sweeping, identity-defining moves designed to create more opportunity for the franchise’s young core and maximize draft capital flexibility in the seasons to come.

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In return, Utah didn’t just take back picks or prospects; they acquired functional veterans like Jusuf Nurkić, Kevin Love, and Kyle Anderson. These players serve two purposes: stabilize a roster now dominated by first- and second-year players, and potentially become trade assets themselves down the line.

With the Jazz in asset-accumulation mode, no veteran outside of rookie-scale contracts should feel completely safe. That’s why it’s worth examining three early trade candidates for the 2025-26 season, players who could be shipped out for picks, prospects, or to facilitate bigger deals before the deadline.

Jusuf Nurkić: The reliable big with an expiring clock

When Utah landed Jusuf Nurkić in the Collin Sexton trade, the move was framed as a veteran stabilizer for a young locker room. The 30-year-old center still has plenty left in the tank: he’s a bruiser in the paint, a solid rebounder, and a capable passer out of the high post. But in the context of Utah’s rebuild, Nurkić is less a long-term fit and more a placeholder until a younger big emerges.

Source: Utah News