Man found guilty of 2015 sexual assault of elderly Westmont woman

SHARE Man found guilty of 2015 sexual assault of elderly Westmont woman
Tevin Rainey

Tevin Rainey | DuPage County state’s attorney’s office

DuPage County state’s attorney’s office

A west suburban man has been found guilty of sexually assaulting and robbing an elderly woman over two years ago during a New Year’s Day home invasion in Westmont.

Tevin Rainey, 23, whose last known address was in Woodridge, was found guilty after a six-day bench trail in front of Judge Brian Telander, according to the DuPage County state’s attorney’s office. Rainey was found guilty of three counts of aggravated criminal sexual assault, two counts of home invasion, one count of armed robbery, one count of aggravated kidnapping and one count of armed violence, all felonies.

Rainey, armed with a handgun, broke into the woman’s apartment about 5 a.m. Jan. 1, 2015 and forced her onto a bed where he sexually assaulted her. The victim was more than 85 years old, authorities said.

He then demanded money, but the woman told him she didn’t have much money in her home. Rainey then forced her at gunpoint to drive to an ATM and give him money from her savings and checking accounts, prosecutors said.

Rainey ordered her to drive to a nearby apartment complex, where he got out of the vehicle and walked away, prosecutors said. The woman returned home and called 911, and was later taken to a hospital to be treated.

An investigation identified Rainey as a suspect in the case, and found him already in police custody on unrelated charges.

Rainey was next expected to appear in court Feb. 17, the state’s attorney’s office said. He faces between 57 and 120 years in prison and will be required to serve 85 percent of that time to be eligible for parole.

The Latest
The funds will help target a big problem for a city opening its doors to President Joe Biden and the Democratic National Convention in August. Just 17.94% of registered voters in suburban Cook County and 25.7% of registered voters in Chicago voted in person or by mail in the March 19 primary.
Playing time has dwindled for Tinordi, a physical defensive defenseman who was a pleasant surprise for the Hawks last season but hasn’t found nearly as much success without Connor Murphy.
His surgeons spent 10 hours transplanting his new lungs and liver in September. Six months after the operation, Dr. Gary Gibbon remains cancer-free, able to breathe on his own and celebrated his 69th birthday on Wednesday.
White Sox fans from all over will flock to Guaranteed Rate Field on Thursday for the team’s home opener against the Tigers.
The lawsuit challenges Illinois’ counting of mail-in-ballots after election day, and has potential impact in this presidential election year.