Rippey v. Gourley

CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 26, 2025
Docket4:24-cv-01694
StatusUnknown

This text of Rippey v. Gourley (Rippey v. Gourley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rippey v. Gourley, (M.D. Pa. 2025).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE MIDDLE DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA

ETHAN RIPPEY, : Civil No. 4:24-cv-1694 : Petitioner, : : v. : (Magistrate Judge Carlson) : MICHAEL GOURLEY, et al., : : Respondents. :

MEMORANDUM OPINION

I. Factual Background and Procedural History The petitioner in this case, Ethan Rippey, is a convicted rapist. The background of Rippey’s sexual assault was thoroughly described by the Pennsylvania Superior Court in its decisions affirming Rippey’s conviction and denying his petition for post-conviction relief. As the Superior Court explained: On August 21, 2016, K.H. (“the victim”) and [Rippey], both college students, were drinking at a college party in York when [Rippey] invited [the victim] and others over to his house. [Rippey] and the victim went alone to the house to play beer pong. They kissed a bit, and then toured the house, ending up in [Rippey]’s bedroom. They kissed some more and [Rippey] digitally penetrated the victim's vagina. When the penetration became rough, however, the victim asked him to stop. He did not stop, and she pushed him away. [Rippey] then grabbed her and forced his penis into her mouth. Although the victim pushed him away again, and continually said “no,” [Rippey] pushed her onto his bed, strangled her, and anally and vaginally raped her. After [Rippey] climaxed, he called the victim a “dirty little slut” as she ran crying out of the house and back to the party. Her friends took her to the York Hospital where a forensic nurse conducted a SAFE rape examination. One week later, the victim reported the incident to the college's campus security and eventually she reported it to the York City Police Department.

The Commonwealth charged [Rippey] with [rape by forcible compulsion, involuntary deviate sexual intercourse by forcible compulsion, sexual assault, and simple assault]. Prior to trial, [Rippey] filed a Motion in limine, requesting, among other things, that the court preclude the Commonwealth's sexual assault forensic expert from testifying that the victim's injuries were consistent with “non- consensual sex.” The court granted the Motion, in part, and precluded the expert from using the phrase “consistent with non-consensual sex.” The court noted, without objection from [Rippey], that the expert would be allowed to opine on whether the injuries were caused by force.

At [Rippey]’s three-day jury trial, the Commonwealth presented the testimony of the victim, the SAFE nurse examiner, and the sexual assault forensic expert, among others. The victim testified regarding the evening of the rape and her extensive physical and psychological injuries. On cross examination, she testified that she had had one prior incident with [Rippey] in the spring of 2016 where all she remembered was drinking and playing video games with [Rippey] and two others before waking up bent over [Rippey]’s bed with [Rippey] standing behind her pulling up his pants, and her crying because she did not know what had occurred. She also recalled that she was bleeding anally later that evening.

The nurse examiner testified regarding the extensive injuries to the victim's body, stating that of 270 SAFE rape examinations she had conducted, the examination of the victim revealed the most injuries she had ever had to document. She stated that the victim had numerous lacerations, abrasions, and bruises in her vagina and anus, including a large laceration in the victim's anus “caused by blunt force trauma.” The nurse also testified that she was unable to conduct a full internal examination because the victim was in too much pain.

The sexual assault expert testified that she reviewed the victim's medical chart and opined that the lacerations the victim received on August 21, 2016, resulted from “blunt force trauma,” and were “consistent with force.”

[Rippey] testified that the August 2016 encounter was consensual rough sex, and stated “it takes two to tango.” When counsel acknowledged that [Rippey] had been in the courtroom throughout all of the testimony presented by the Commonwealth, [Rippey] responded, “Yeah. I've missed a lot of class because of it.”

The jury convicted [Rippey] of the above charges. The court ordered a presentence investigation (“PSI”), and the Sexual Offenders Assessment Board (“SOAB”) evaluated [Rippey]. The court held [Rippey]’s sentencing hearing on February 20, 2019. The Commonwealth presented a statement from the victim and her aunt. A few of [Rippey]’s friends and family members presented statements, and the court acknowledged that [Rippey] had provided many letters of support from other friends and family members. The sentencing court noted its review of, inter alia, the PSI report, the SVP report, the victim's impact statement, and the many letters written on behalf of [Rippey]. The court also noted [Rippey]’s prior record score of zero before it imposed a sentence of 7 ½ to 15 years’ incarceration on the rape by forcible compulsion conviction, a consecutive term of 9 ½ to 19 years’ incarceration on the IDSI by forcible compulsion conviction, and a concurrent term of 3 to 6 months’ incarceration for the simple assault conviction, for an aggregate of 17 to 34 years’ incarceration.

Commonwealth v. Rippey, 290 A.3d 693, 2022 WL 17812858 *1-*2 (Pa. Super. Ct. 2022). Following his conviction Rippey followed an occasionally desultory and somewhat erratic course of post-conviction litigation. This post-conviction litigation began when Rippey filed a motion to set aside and vacate his conviction which was denied by the trial court on March 4, 2019. Rippey then filed a direct appeal with the Pennsylvania Superior Court challenging this conviction. On March 20, 2020, the Pennsylvania Superior Court

denied this direct appeal, and affirmed Rippey’s conviction and sentence. In doing so the Court observed that based upon the forensic evidence the trial judge properly “found there to be unusual cruelty in this case.” Commonwealth v. Rippey, No. 627

MDA 2019, 2020 WL 1426658, at *5 (Pa. Super. Ct. Mar. 20, 2020). Having exhausted his direct appeal, Rippey allowed more than seven months to pass before filing a Petition for Post-Conviction Relief in the Court of Common Pleas under Pennsylvania Post-Conviction Relief Act (PCRA) seeking a new trial

on December 3, 2020. The Trial Court denied this petition on September 13, 2021 and Rippey appealed this adverse decision to the Pennsylvania Superior Court. In this PCRA appeal Rippey challenged the effectiveness of his counsel on four

separate grounds, none of which are pursued by the petitioner in the instant federal habeas corpus petition.1 The Superior Court rejected Rippey’s claims of ineffective

1 In this petition Rippey alleges that trial counsel was ineffective in failing to call an expert witness who may have been able to testify that the victim’s failure to take prescribed medications near the date of this assault could have potentially affected her ability to accurately recall and relate events. (Doc. 1). Notably, it appears that this proffered testimony did not actually exist at the time of Rippey’s trial in 2019. Rather, this proffer is first contained in a July 30, 2024 letter. (Id., Ex. A). In contrast, in his PCRA petition appeal, Rippey raised the following, unrelated, claims of ineffective assistance of counsel: First, Rippey claimed that trial counsel was aware that there were numerous people who were willing to testify to Appellant's good reputation in the community but failed to call these witnesses. Second, Rippey assistance of counsel and affirmed the denial of this PCRA petition on December 19, 2022. Rippey then filed a Petition for Reargument with the Pennsylvania

Superior Court on January 3, 2023, which was denied on February 28, 2023.

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