Pierce County Prosecutor Mark Lindquist has charged Donald Victor Schneider, 53, with Rape in the First Degree and Rape of a Child in the First Degree for kidnapping and sexually assaulting a nine-year-old girl in 1995.
“This is another example of our cold case team using DNA technology to get violent criminals off the streets and keep violent criminals off the streets,” said Prosecutor Mark Lindquist.
On September 23, 1995, the girl was walking to the bus stop near her Buckley area home when the defendant stopped his car and asked her what time it was. He then dragged her by her hair and forced her into his car. He said, “Get down and stay down or else I’ll cut your head open.” The defendant put a blanket over the victim and drove her to a wooded area near Eatonville, where he forced her to undress. He tied the victim with duct tape and sexually assaulted her. Before letting her go he warned, “Don’t tell or I’ll come back cuz I know where you live and I’ll kill your family and even you.” He also told the girl that, “I’m a drunk old man and my brain needs help and I’m going to leave you here so someone can pick you up.” The girl was walking along the road when a woman driving by stopped and took her to the Sheriff’s Department. From there she went to the hospital.
The victim’s clothing was collected at the hospital after the assault, but the case went unsolved until May of 2012 when a cold case detective sent the victim’s underpants to the Washington State Patrol crime lab where they matched the defendant’s DNA to genetic material left on the underpants. The probability that the DNA does not match the defendant is estimated at 1 in 160 quadrillion.
The defendant is a registered sex offender and was originally convicted of Rape in the Second Degree in 1982. In 2007, the defendant was sentenced to life in prison after a jury convicted him of kidnapping and raping a woman in Tacoma. He is currently incarcerated at Walla Walla State Penitentiary.
Prosecutor Lindquist said, “While the defendant is currently serving a life sentence for a different crime, we are prosecuting him for two reasons. One, to obtain justice for this victim on this case, and two, so we have an insurance policy to keep a dangerous offender in prison where he belongs.”
He will be arraigned on July 19 at 1:30 p.m. in Courtroom 270 in the County City Building. Charges are only allegations and a person is presumed innocent unless he or she is proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.