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Scottish court rules arrested man who posed as Irish orphan is missing US fugitive

Nicholas Rossi had tried to con Scottish courts into believing he was an orphan from Ireland who had never been to the US
Nicholas Rossi had tried to con Scottish courts into believing he was an orphan from Ireland who had never been to the US

A man who has been fighting extradition to the US has been identified as US fugitive rape suspect Nicholas Rossi, a Scottish court has ruled.

The 35-year-old has spent the last 11 months trying to con the Scottish courts into believing he is Arthur Knight, an orphan from Ireland who has never been to the US.

This morning, Sheriff Norman McFadyen told Edinburgh Sheriff Court he had found the man to be Mr Rossi - who US authorities have been seeking in connection with rape and sexual assault allegations.

The sheriff said: "I am ultimately satisfied on the balance of probabilities... that Mr Knight is indeed Nicholas Rossi, the person sought for extradition by the United States."

In earlier evidence, Mr Rossi tried to convince the courts he had been tattooed while in a coma to resemble the wanted man, and that his fingerprints had been taken by an NHS worker called "Patrick" on behalf of US prosecutors to frame him.

Nicholas Rossi is wanted by authorities in Utah who allege he raped a 21-year-old in 2008

In a 15-minute conclusion, Sheriff McFadyen rejected Mr Rossi's lies as "implausible" and "fanciful".

The sheriff also dismissed Mr Rossi's reasoning that he changed his name several times as a means of detaching himself from what he claimed to be a traumatic childhood.

Sheriff McFadyen said the repeated name changes are "highly suspicious" and "consistent with someone who was hiding from someone or something".

Mr Rossi was first arrested in October last year after checking himself into the Queen Elizabeth University Hospital in Glasgow with Covid-19.

It is alleged he faked his own death in the US and fled to Scotland to evade prosecution.

While hiding in Scotland, under the alias Knight and posing as a tutor, Mr Rossi developed Covid pneumonitis and became "the sickest patient on the ward", according to medical staff who were caring for him at the time.

It was at this point that Interpol issued Police Scotland officers with a red notice, detailing pictures of the wanted man, including images of his tattoos and fingerprints.

Medical staff and the two officers who arrested Mr Rossi, PC Shannon McGill and PC Jamie Crombie, were able to identify the patient by looking at the tattoos.

Mr Rossi was granted bail at the time on the understanding he required more treatment.

Rossi was first arrested in October last year after checking himself into hospital with Covid-19

But he was then rearrested on 20 January at his address in Glasgow for failing to attend an extradition hearing that day.

Procurator fiscal Jennifer Johnston insisted Mr Rossi posed "a significant flight risk", and told the courts he had made several attempts to leave QEUH with oxygen canisters in December, including hiring a private ambulance and offering to pay £100 to a taxi to take him home.

A stream of preliminary hearings then took place, which saw Mr Rossi sack at least six lawyers working on his case and claim that he had been tortured by prison officers.

The hearings culminated in an extraordinary identification case where the Rhode Island citizen made one last attempt to con lawyers by insisting his fingerprints had been meddled with and that he had been tattooed while unconscious in hospital.

The accused is wanted by authorities in Utah who allege he raped a 21-year-old in 2008.

In addition, US prosecutors submitted supplementary extradition requests in late October for Mr Rossi, one of which relates to an allegation of rape in Salt Lake City and another to an allegation of sexual assault elsewhere.