SANTA ANA, Calif. — A 51-year-old Cathedral City resident was in custody Monday in connection with a trio of attacks on women in Aliso Viejo dating back to January 2020.
Robert "Robi" Yucas, an Army veteran and cargo pilot, is suspected of sexually assaulting a woman last month near Pacific Park Drive and Alicia Parkway, and two other women in January and April of last year in roughly the same area.
Investigators checked DNA recovered from the victims in Orange County, but got no matches in law enforcement databases, Orange County Sheriff Don Barnes.
A break in the case came when investigators received an anonymous tip through Orange County Crime Stoppers about a person -- Yucas -- who was arrested on a charge of assault with force likely to cause great bodily injury on September 4 around 2:30 a.m. in the 2500 block of Ingraham Street near Mission Bay, according to San Diego police. A DNA sample was taken from Yucas and it matched the DNA evidence in the Orange County attacks, Sheriff Barnes said.
Yucas, who was a pilot in the military, works for Kalitta Air and was returning from a trip abroad when he was arrested Thursday at the airport in Anchorage, Alaska, Barnes said.
"This is a very significant case that had unfolded rapidly over the last several days," Barnes told reporters at a news conference.
Yucas had the same method of operation in each attack -- grabbing a woman on the hiking trail and choking the victim into unconsciousness before sexually assaulting them, Barnes alleged.
Yucas lived in Aliso Viejo from 2017 through 2019, Barnes said. He formerly lived in Oceanside, according to social media posts.
The sheriff and Orange County District Attorney Todd Spitzer said they suspect there are more victims and asked anyone with information to call a tip line at 714-647-7419. Anonymous tips are also still welcome through Orange County Crime Stoppers at 855-TIP-OCCS.
"Sexual predators do not stop on their own," Spitzer said. "They only stop because law enforcement ... stops them."
Sheriff's officials launched media campaigns to help catch a suspect last year, and last month they released composite sketches, but the suspect was still "brazen" enough to return to the area to commit more attacks, Spitzer said.
Yucas is in custody in Anchorage. He appeared for an extradition hearing Tuesday, where bail was set at $1 million. If he bails out the judge ordered that he be held under house arrest and tracked with a GPS device. Yucas told the judge he was in the process of retaining an attorney. A status hearing in the extradition case was set for October 19 in Anchorage.
Yucas has already been charged with three counts of kidnapping to commit a sex offense, one count of forcible rape, one count of attempted forcible rape and three counts of assault with the intent to commit a sex offense, all felonies.
Yucas could face up to 45 years to life in prison if convicted of all crimes at trial, but because of a new state law granting parole sooner for defendants older than 50, Yucas could qualify for a parole hearing in 19 years post-conviction, Spitzer said.
Spitzer vowed that his office would continue sending prosecutors to all parole hearings.
In the most recent attack Aug. 28, a 41-year-old woman told detectives she was walking about 11 p.m. in the area in Woodfield Park -- which features a greenbelt to the north, a shopping center on the southwest corner and a condominium complex on the southeast -- when a man grabbed her from behind and dragged her into some bushes, where she says she lost consciousness. When she awoke, her pants were pulled down and her assailant had disappeared, according to prosecutors.
On Jan. 20, 2020, a 24-year-old woman was skateboarding at Woodfield Park in Aliso Viejo when an assailant allegedly asked her for directions, and as she pulled out her phone, he grabbed her in a chokehold and dragged her into the bushes next to the walking path, where she was choked into unconsciousness and raped, prosecutors alleged.
On April 2, 2020, a 41-year-old woman was jogging in Woodfield Park when a man grabbed her from behind and dragged her into the bushes in a chokehold, but she fought him off, prosecutors said.
The prosecutor said an additional assault occurred in Riverside County, but no date was given.
"These attacks are the things nightmares are made of," Spitzer said. "They were just indiscriminately snatched from the trail."
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