A 26-year-old man pleaded guilty to aggravated sexual assault Wednesday and was sentenced to 25 years in prison, the Tarrant County Criminal District Attorney’s Office said in a news release. Jessie DeWayne Ray was accused of sexually assaulting a woman at gunpoint in an Arlington park in 2019. Ray recorded the assault on his iPhone and the video was discovered in May 2020 when Tyler police arrested him during a narcotics investigation. When Tyler police entered information from the video into an FBI database known as the Violent Criminal Apprehension Program, they found it was a match for the then-unsolved Arlington case.
Read MoreFORT WORTH, Texas - A Tarrant County judge sentenced a man to 25 years in prison for a 2019 sexual assault. Prosecutors say it was a new law that helped lead to the arrest.
Molly Jane’s Law was passed after the murder of a Fort Worth woman in 2017. Just months after the new law took effect, prosecutors say it was used to track down a sexual assault suspect who pleaded guilty Wednesday. The law was both inspired by a Tarrant County case and used to prosecute a Tarrant County case. It was on a trail at Arlington’s Canyon Park where a man, later identified as Jessie Dewayne Ray, attacked.
Read MoreMolly was more than a daughter to Tracy Matheson. The two were more like best friends.
“It’s like she’s my right hand. I could count on her for anything,” Matheson recalled.
Matheson remembers Molly’s humor and kindness and how she believed in the good in people. But it was evil that took her daughter’s life. At 22, Molly was assaulted and killed by a man who was accused of prior attacks and even left DNA evidence behind.
Read MoreAnyone who has suffered the horrific loss of a loved one know how hard it is to deal with the alchemy of emotions. Anger competes with despair to fuel a sense of futility. The suffering of the person who died crushes the spirit. The permanence of death haunts the future.
Read MoreIn this episode of Everstory, Tracy describes how God began inspiring her to mobilize her experience and boundless energy to help lessen the trauma shared by other victims of sexual assault. Along the way, Tracy has been empowered by Jesus to spread an undeniable light over victims of assault and abuse. This story is about a lot of things, but at its core, it’s a story about how God uses us in times of crisis. Some of us are called to do a little. But others are called to bear the load. In her mission to ensure that all victims are heard, believed, and beloved, Tracy has accepted an extraordinary destiny. To learn more or donate, visit projectbeloved.org
Read MoreWelcome to the very first episode of Everstory – the podcast that features real stories about how everyday people experience the transformational light and love of Jesus despite struggling in their darkest moments. As a bonus to our new listeners, this is a two part episode, and both episodes are available … right now. A powerful example of resilience and strength, Tracy is a mother who, in 2017, endured the unspeakable loss of her daughter. Despite living through the darkest moments imaginable, she began experiencing Jesus’ unquestionable love. After a string of inspirational moments, she began a campaign of healing to honor her daughter’s memory. By the end of this story, you will be truly blessed to see how God can turn our worst fears into a mobilization for good.
Read MoreMolly Jane Matheson was raped, strangled and murdered in 2017 by a former intimate partner. Since her murder, Molly Jane’s mother, Tracy Matheson, has fought for justice for both Molly Jane and other women who have experienced sexual assault. In this first ever live episode of the Podcast on Crimes Against Women, Tracy Matheson courageously shares the story of what happened to Molly Jane, her journey to reveal the truth throughout the investigation of her daughter’s murder, the establishment of Molly Jane’s Law in the State of Texas and the founding of Project Beloved: The Molly Jane Mission.
Read MoreA new ‘soft interview room’ at the Charlottesville Commonwealth’s Attorney’s office is designed to make a more comfortable place for victims to recall and discuss the traumatic events they’ve been through as prosecutors and police prepare criminal court cases.
Read MoreThere’s a new room in the Virginia Military Institute Police Department. It’s the first of its kind on a college campus in Virginia and ready to be used to help survivors of sexual assault. It’s called a soft interview room and it’s all thanks to a non-profit organization. “Project Beloved is a non-profit with a mission statement to educate, advocate and collaborate to change the conversation about sexual assault and empower survivors to find their voices. Project Beloved was born out of a parent’s worst nightmare. It’s the easiest way I can say it. My daughter was raped and murdered April 10th, 2017 and in the aftermath of that and understanding the circumstances that basically allowed her to be killed, we decided we had to do something,” said Tracy Matheson, Project Beloved founder.
Read MoreTracy Matheson, founder of Project Beloved, is creating a space for sexual assault victims to feel safe when telling their stories. This new space on campus is called the “soft interview room,” and will be open to any law enforcement agency in the area who needs it. The soft interview room at VMI is the third in Virginia and the very first to be on a Virginia college campus.
Read MoreAfter recovering her daughter’s body, Tracy Matheson, 56, learned her child had a tattoo: the word “Beloved.” Matheson’s daughter, Molly Jane, 22, was killed after she was sexually assaulted in April 2017. Then, Matheson started seeing the word “Beloved” everywhere, and it inspired her nonprofit.
Read More“When I kind of pieced all of that together, I was like ‘Wait, she could be alive had someone done their job, had someone believed,’” the mother said.
Read MoreWe'll be talking to Project Beloved founder Tracy Matheson, whose daughter Molly Jane was raped and murdered in 2017 at the age of 22. Tracy will be joined by Katie Coats and Melissa Winton, survivors who were assaulted years earlier by the same perpetrator who killed Molly Jane. These courageous women will be joined by Deputy Division Chief Allenna Bangs from the Tarrant County District Attorney's office and TAASA CEO Rose Luna.
Read MoreHPD is proud to partner with Tracy Matheson, founder of Project Beloved, a non-profit organization who installs soft interview rooms for the investigations of sexual assault and domestic violence. Project Beloved's install of soft interview room #42 at the Houston Police Department creates a trauma-informed space for survivors to share their experiences of abuse and assault.
Read MoreMolly Jane Matheson and Megan Getrum did not die in vain. Their lives and deaths will have an impact on the way law enforcement approaches victims of sexual assault, according to several individuals who gave victim impact statements in the 213th District Court Tuesday morning.
Read MoreWhile the date of April 10 may seem insignificant, five years ago today the world changed for a Fort Worth family. "The first April 10 and the second April 10 and so on... they were hurdles. Honestly, every 10th of every month for several years were hard," Tracy Matheson said.
Read MoreA North Texas serial rapist and murderer will spend the rest of his life behind bars after admitting he's guilty of two murders. Reginald Kimbro was set to go to trial next week for the 2017 rape and murder of 22-year-old Molly Matheson.
Read MoreA Plano man accused of killing two Dallas-area women after committing a string of rapes across the state was sentenced to life in prison Friday.
Read MoreDallas-area women reported Reginald Kimbro to authorities before he killed in 2017. They said they waited years to get justice and lamented that he wasn’t stopped sooner.
Read MoreReginald Kimbro pled guilty on Friday, March 18, to the April 2017 rapes and murders of Molly Jane Matheson, a 22-year-old Fort Worth woman, and Megan Getrum, a 36-year-old Plano woman. He has been sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole for both cases. Getrum's murder case was handled in Dallas County.
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