Nicholas Alahverdian, who faked death in 2020 found alive in Europe
PROVIDENCE, R.I. — Rhode Island State Police said Wednesday
a longtime child welfare reform advocate who was reported dead almost two years
ago has been found alive in Europe.
Maj. Robert Creamer said Nicholas Alahverdian was located in
Scotland. No further information was immediately released.
On March 3, 2020, a statement claiming to be from the family
of Alahverdian said that the 32-year-old died after battling non-Hodgkin
lymphoma.
The life of the Department of Children, Youth, and Families
reform advocate was quickly honored by legislators at the Rhode Island State
House and with citations from local leaders, including from Woonsocket's mayor
Lisa Baldelli-Hunt.
"He was just always a fine young man, a gentleman, very
dedicated to his cause," she told NBC 10 News Wednesday.
However, the Providence Journal reports that Alahverdian was
found in Scotland a month ago after he was hospitalized with COVID symptoms.
"It would be really interesting to hear why he did all
this," Baldelli-Hunt said.
Members of Alahverdian's own family said they were just as
surprised as everyone else.
"I'm shocked. And honestly, I feel like I was used a
little bit," his uncle, Michael Alahverdian of Connecticut, told NBC 10.
Michael Alavherdian said he even planned a funeral for his
nephew after receiving a request over the phone from who he thought was
Alahverdian's wife.
"I went along with it, meaning, I was unaware that this
was a setup," he said.
Also Wednesday, the Utah County Attorney's Office said
Alahverdian, which identified his real name as Nicholas Rossi, had been taken
into custody and charged in connection to a 2008 sexual assault in Ohio.
"We weren't looking for him in Europe," said Utah
County Attorney David Leavitt in a Zoom interview with NBC 10.
Leavitt said Alahverdian's DNA was recently entered into a
database used by law enforcement around the globe and matched with evidence in
a 14-year-old sexual assault case.
"It was a cold case because the suspect did a really
great job of hiding himself and creating new identities," Leavitt said.
The office said it identified Alahverdian as the suspect by
processing an original sexual assault kit from a Utah case that had never been
tested.
In 2018, the DNA profile from the Utah case returned as a
match for the alleged assault case in Ohio. The suspect, in the Ohio case, was
identified as Alahverdian.
The county attorney's office said he "had fled the
country to avoid prosecution in Ohio and attempted to lead investigators and
state legislators in other states to believe that he was deceased."
After the 2008 alleged assault, authorities said Alahverdian
was a "suspect in a number of similar offenses in Utah and throughout the
United States."
The county attorney said efforts were underway to extradite
Alahverdian to Utah, a process that could take months.
Alahverdian claimed he was abused and tortured during
out-of-state placements in Florida and Nebraska, eventually exposing dangerous
living conditions for children. He later sued those alleged abusers and state
officials. The case was settled.
"We believe that there are other victims out
there," said Leavitt. "Whether those victims are in Rhode Island, or
in Ohio, or in Scotland, or anywhere else this individual has been -- we're
asking anyone who has information about possibly being victimized by this
suspect that they reach out to our office."
Anyone who believes they were victimized by Alahverdian, or
who has additional information that may help the case, can contact the Utah
State Bureau of Investigation at 801-965-4747 or the Utah County Attorney's
Office at 801-851-8026.
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