Nicholas Rossi, a U.S. fugitive who allegedly pretended to die and escaped the country to dodge rape charges, is in a Utah jail after being extradited from Scotland last week, jail records showed on Monday.

Rossi, who is legally named Nicholas Alahverdian, is accused of raping a 21-year-old woman in Orem, Utah, in 2008, local prosecutors said. He was not found as a suspect until about 10 years later, because of a backlog of DNA test kits at the Utah State Crime Lab.

Rossi also faces another felony rape charge in Salt Lake County, where prosecutors say he raped a 26-year-old ex-girlfriend after a fight, in 2008. He has multiple other allegations against him in Rhode Island and Ohio for domestic violence, sexual abuse and fraud.

The 36-year-old, who has used at least 10 fake names in his flight from the law, was booked Friday afternoon into the Davis County Jail, which holds many federal prisoners in northern Utah. He will probably be moved to Utah County soon, where he will face trial for felony rape charges, the Utah County Attorney’s Office said.

His first court date had not been scheduled as of Monday and records did not show who will be his lawyer in court.

The American runaway grew up in foster homes in Rhode Island and went back to the state before he allegedly faked his death and left the country. An online obituary said Rossi died Feb. 29, 2020, of advanced non-Hodgkin lymphoma. But state police and his former foster family doubted if he was really dead.

Rossi was caught in Scotland the next year after he was seen at a Glasgow hospital while getting treatment for COVID-19. He claimed he was an Irish orphan named Arthur Knight who had never been to the U.S.

After a long court fight, an Edinburgh judge decided in August that the extradition could go ahead. He called Rossi “as lying and cheating as he is dodging and tricking.” Rossi lost an appeal in December and was arrested by the U.S. Marshals Service.

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