Man admits to rape; won't turn on roommate
NORWICH – In a plea deal designed to keep a 34-year-old Plymouth man out of state prison for having sexual intercourse with a girl 19 years his junior, the defendant had to admit his part in the act and testify against his roommate, who allegedly committed the same offense.
While in County Court Monday, Scott George admitted that he had sexual intercourse with the underage teen, but he would not talk about seeing his roommate, Sam Clemens, walk into a bedroom with the same girl. The alleged incident occurred in April, 2006 inside a Town of Plymouth mobile home.
District Attorney Joseph A. McBride offered George six months in the Chenango County Correctional Facility and 10 years probation for an admittance and his testimony, but George wouldn’t give the details the DA wanted. As for Clemens’ part, George was mute.
“There is no way that in a single-wide trailer, if they were having sexual relations 20 feet away, that he didn’t hear them,” McBride said in court. Because he would only provide half of what the plea deal required, the DA asked the judge to throw out the deal and let George go to trial. “I’m not accepting it. He is acting like a gangster and I don’t want anything to do with him.”
George, who was pleading guilty to rape in the third degree, would face a state prison sentence if he were found guilty at trial. Insisting that he had no direct knowledge of his roommate’s alleged crime, the Plymouth man reiterated that he was not playing games with the court.
While in County Court Monday, Scott George admitted that he had sexual intercourse with the underage teen, but he would not talk about seeing his roommate, Sam Clemens, walk into a bedroom with the same girl. The alleged incident occurred in April, 2006 inside a Town of Plymouth mobile home.
District Attorney Joseph A. McBride offered George six months in the Chenango County Correctional Facility and 10 years probation for an admittance and his testimony, but George wouldn’t give the details the DA wanted. As for Clemens’ part, George was mute.
“There is no way that in a single-wide trailer, if they were having sexual relations 20 feet away, that he didn’t hear them,” McBride said in court. Because he would only provide half of what the plea deal required, the DA asked the judge to throw out the deal and let George go to trial. “I’m not accepting it. He is acting like a gangster and I don’t want anything to do with him.”
George, who was pleading guilty to rape in the third degree, would face a state prison sentence if he were found guilty at trial. Insisting that he had no direct knowledge of his roommate’s alleged crime, the Plymouth man reiterated that he was not playing games with the court.
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