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Indiana Rapist handed 150-year term

Allen Superior Judge John F. Surbeck Jr. told 17-year-old Christopher Caskey on Monday that he doubted that Caskey was remorseful because he was on the run for three months after he raped two women at gunpoint in their Indiana Hobson Road apartment in January.

"If you were remorseful, you would have been at the police department the day of the incident," Surbeck said. "I've been a professional in the criminal justice system for in excess of 30 years, and I can recall only one offense as horrible."

Then Surbeck sentenced Caskey to 150 years in prison.

Minutes earlier, Caskey, with shackled hands and wearing an orange Allen County, Indiana Jail jumpsuit, stood at the defense table, looked directly at the victims and apologized.

Caskey said he only recently learned how his actions have affected others. He told the victims if he could change what happened he would do so more for the victims than for himself.

He admitted to "playing the system" as a juvenile. Then he told the judge how he learned about Jesus while in jail and believes he is changing.

As he spoke, Caskey sniffled often. He spoke briefly with his grandfather from the defense table before leaving the courtroom. When bailiffs began to escort him from the room, he began crying.

Caskey pleaded guilty to 10 of 11 criminal charges in late August for forcing his way at gunpoint into a Hobson Road apartment Jan. 10, raping two women and forcing each to perform sexual acts on him, his accomplice and each other.

He pleaded guilty to two counts of rape, four counts of criminal deviate conduct, one count of burglary, one count of robbery and two counts of robbery.

Five people - two men and three women - spoke to the Indiana judge on Caskey's behalf during his sentencing. Each told the judge Caskey was not the monstrous person suggested by his crimes and asked for leniency.

Caskey's attorney, Mark Kiefer, asked the judge for a 90-year sentence, stating the sentence would be proportional to the crimes. The victims were not physically scarred, Kiefer said, although he acknowledged that the attacks were emotionally damaging.

Kiefer said people charged with murder face a lesser sentence than Caskey, which sends the wrong message to inmates and isn't fair to the victims because the sentences are not proportional to the crimes.

"Inmates ask all the time down at the jail: Wouldn't they have been better off to kill these women?" Kiefer said after the sentencing. "It sends a chill down my spine."

Kiefer asked the judge to consider the role played by drugs and alcohol in the crimes, but Deputy Prosecutor Stacey Speith argued there was no way to prove either was involved because Caskey was not arrested until three months after the attacks.

Caskey told Indiana police he was high on Ecstasy and had been drinking alcohol before the attacks, according to court records.

Speith asked Surbeck to give Caskey the maximum sentence stated in the plea agreement - 150 years. She asked the judge to consider the nature and circumstances of the crimes as well as Caskey's contact with the criminal justice system, which includes a stint in juvenile prison.

One victim, who was pregnant at the time of the assault, wrote a letter for the hearing, which Speith read aloud to the packed courtroom.

The victim described Caskey as an animal who ought to be caged forever. She must deal with the attacks for the rest of her life and Caskey should rot in prison for the rest of his, the letter said.

Sometimes she is unable to sleep at night and she will not go anywhere after dark alone, her letter said.

At one point, she told The Journal Gazette that she and the other victims were displeased with the plea agreement. They wanted Caskey to receive more prison time, she said. They were also willing to go to trial and testify about the attacks.

Speith said she understood their feelings but the prosecutor's office thought the 150-year term was appropriate.

Without the plea agreement, Caskey could have faced a minimum of 333 years in prison and a maximum of 515 years had he been convicted on all charges, according to state sentencing guidelines.

Caskey's accomplice, Benjamin A. Rose, 17, was sentenced to 135 years in August for his role in the attacks and was granted credit for 498 days in jail.

Caskey was granted credit for 195 days in jail.

Under Indiana good time credit system, inmates earn a day of credit for every day they behave in prison - which can effectively cut prison terms in half. Rose could be eligible for release in 2070 while Caskey could be eligible for release in 2078.

Such long sentences become meaningless for criminals, Kiefer said.

Rose plans to appeal his sentence and Caskey will await that outcome before making such a decision, Kiefer said.

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