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Virginia rape suspect released from jail over Covid-19 concerns went straight to victim's home, shot her dead

Ibrahim Bouaichi had been accused of several violent crimes when a circuit court judge ruled that he could be released on a $25,000 bond
PUBLISHED AUG 7, 2020
Ibrahim Bouaichi (Alexandria Police Department)
Ibrahim Bouaichi (Alexandria Police Department)

ALEXANDRIA, VIRGINIA: A Virginia rape suspect who was released from jail amidst concerns about the Covid-19 pandemic allegedly went back to the victim's apartment and shot her dead, police have said.

Karla Dominguez, a native of Venezuela who did not have any family in the country, had called the police in October 2019 to allege that she had been sexually assaulted by her boyfriend, 33-year-old Ibrahim E. Bouaichi, according to the Washington Post.

Bouaichi turned himself in on October 21 was charged with six felonies, rape, sodomy, strangulation, abduction, burglary, and malicious wounding, and was held without bond. A grand jury subsequently indicted him on the first five charges, and a trial date was set for March 30. 

However, the trial was postponed due to the coronavirus pandemic and Bouaichi's lawyers, Manuel Leiva and Frank Salvato, successfully argued that the virus was a danger to both inmates and their attorneys.

On April 9, over the objections of an Alexandria prosecutor, Circuit Court Judge Nolan Dawkins released Bouaichi on a $25,000 bond, with the condition that he only leave his Maryland home to meet with his lawyers or pretrial services officials. Dawkins, who retired in June, made the ruling despite Virginia law stating that those charged with certain violent crimes such as rape are presumed to be a danger and are not eligible for bond.

Court records obtained by the Post showed that his lawyers said "social distancing and proper disinfecting measures are impossible while incarcerated" and that "the risk of contracting Covid-19 in a jail is exceedingly obvious." They also noted the risk for themselves and said a contact visit would "also expose themselves to contaminated air and surfaces.'

They also claimed that Bouaichi was "being effectively deprived of legal counsel" because the Alexandria jail had "imposed severe restrictions on visitation since the Covid-19 outbreak" which meant they could only have video conferences with their client.

On July 29, he returned to Alexandria and allegedly killed Dominguez outside her apartment in the city's West End. She lived on South Greenmount Drive, in the Town Square at Mark Center Apartments and was found dead of multiple wounds to the upper body.

He managed to escape the authorities after the shooting, with an official video release then asking for the public's help in locating him and declaring him "armed and dangerous." On Wednesday, August 5, federal marshals and Alexandria police spotted the 33-year-old in Prince George’s County and pursued him. He crashed his vehicle, and then police went to arrest him, they found that he had shot himself. As of August 6, he was still in a grave condition.

According to reports, the warning signs had been there. Following his release from Alexandria jail, he had a run-in with police in Greenbelt, where he lived with his parents. The police said that shortly before midnight on May 8, they received a holdup alarm from a Wendy's restaurant, and on arrival, found Bouaichi acting strangely.

Greenbelt police spokesman George Mathews said the 33-year-old was uncooperative, "may have been intoxicated, and wouldn’t communicate with the officers" and "put his vehicle in drive and rammed the K-9 officer’s vehicle." He was arrested and charged with two counts of first-degree assault, two counts of second-degree assault, harming a law enforcement dog, resisting arrest, driving while intoxicated, and multiple traffic charges but was released from jail again on May 11.

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