Today, Joseph Rivera-Rivera, 21, received a sentence of 6 to 12 years in a state penitentiary for sexually assaulting a 12 year old girl in 2016. Judge William T. Tully imposed the sentence. The police investigation determined that the defendant assaulted the girl on two separate occasions during the summer of 2016. The girl described how the defendant pinned her down and refused to stop engaging in intercourse with her despite her pleas for him to stop. In January 2019, the defendant pleaded guilty to the charges of rape of a child, unlawful contact with a minor, and corruption of minor. During the sentencing, defense counsel argued for a mitigated sentence citing the age of the defendant and that his admission of guilt avoided a potential trial for the young girl. Judge Tully acknowledged that the defendant did not re-victimize the girl with a trial but indicated that he could not ignore that the defendant had assaulted the girl twice. In denying the request for mitigation, the judge stated “You knew she did not want to have contact with you—and you proceeded to only think about what you wanted.” Chief Deputy District Attorney Jennifer Gettle noted that the victim has struggled to recover from the assaults, “She engaged in self-harm and a suicide attempt—we hope her presence at sentencing will give her a sense of justice and the closure she needs.” The court also sentenced the defendant to be on a consecutive period of five years of probation, to undergo sexual offender’s treatment, and to be a lifetime registrant under Megan’s Law.
Affiant Det. Christopher Silvio, Harrisburg Bureau of Police