Roanoke Times Copyright (c) 1995, Landmark Communications, Inc. DATE: TUESDAY, July 17, 1990 TAG: 9007170364 SECTION: VIRGINIA PAGE: B-7 EDITION: EVENING SOURCE: LAURENCE HAMMACK STAFF WRITER DATELINE: LENGTH: Medium
Stephen Frank Simpkins, 19, was sentenced to nine years in prison for attempted rape, malicious wounding and statutory burglary with intent to commit rape.
"I was feeling a lot of anger and hurt" shortly before the attack, Simpkins testified in Roanoke Circuit Court.
Simpkins, a house painter, said that on the day of the Jan. 31 attack, he had been having problems sleeping and could no longer deal with his anger after co-workers had teased him repeatedly about his speech impediment.
"I just couldn't control it," Simpkins said of his anger. "It was overwhelming me, and I couldn't stop it until the end and there was blood on [the woman's] hand."
Authorities have said that Simpkins went to his victim's home on Windsor Avenue Southwest as she was preparing to leave for work and asked to use the telephone.
After leaving the apartment door ajar as he left, Simpkins returned a short time later with a knife and ordered the woman into her bedroom.
Simpkins and the woman began to struggle as he forced her on the bed, and the woman's hand was cut as she fought off her attacker. Simpkins fled after he saw that the woman had been cut.
"But for her ability to protect herself, we would have had a much more serious situation," Assistant Commonwealth's Attorney Ann Hill said.
Although Simpkins did not go into detail about the reasons for the attack, a probation officer and a psychiatrist both linked the incident to his anger about being teased for stuttering.
Simpkins told Circuit Judge Roy Willett that while he deserved to be punished, he also needed treatment for his speech problems and anger control. "I'm ashamed of the charges that I'm in here for," he told Willett. "I never thought of myself as capable of doing something like this, and I'm very scared."
by CNB