EVERETT – A man charged with the violent rape of a teenage girl was arrested this morning after he walked by the detective who is investigating the attack.
Snohomish County sheriff’s detective Christopher Leyda was preparing to interview with a television station outside the Snohomish County courthouse when he noticed Larry Donnell Baker, 33, walk past him in the courtyard, sheriff’s spokeswoman Rebecca Hover said.
Leyda ordered Baker to get on the ground, handcuffed him and transported him to jail. Baker apparently was coming to turn himself in, Hover said.
Baker, 33, was charged with first-degree rape Tuesday after investigators learned that his DNA reportedly matched genetic evidence collected at the rape scene in south Everett, according to court documents. An arrest warrant seeking a $1 million bail was issued for Baker.
He was arrested Sept. 26 and freed after posting $25,000 bail. Prosecutors said they planned to argue for higher bail when Baker appeared in court, but he posted bail before that happened.
Since his release from jail, Baker reportedly moved out of his apartment, according to charging papers filed by deputy prosecutor Craig Matheson.
Baker also is a suspect in an unsolved 2004 rape in Waterloo, Iowa, documents say.
It was the Iowa case that gave Snohomish County investigators a break in the Everett assault. A computer matched DNA that was collected in Everett with genetic material from the unsolved Iowa rape. Baker had been questioned by police in the 2004 attack.
The victim in the Everett attack had been walking to work about 7:30 a.m. when a man grabbed her and dragged her into the parking lot of an apartment complex in 12600 block of Fourth Avenue W., police said.
The assailant told the girl he would “slit her throat if she made any noise,” according to the charging documents filed Tuesday. Before he left, “he stated he would see her again,” papers said.
Baker lived in the 800 block of 112th Street SE in Everett, about a dozen blocks from where the 17-year-old girl was attacked.
A composite sketch done with the help of the victim is similar to a photo of Baker taken in Iowa, Matheson said.
After getting a search warrant last week, police took DNA samples from Baker. The samples were sent to the Washington State Patrol Crime Lab for comparison with evidence collected at the Everett rape scene.
At his apartment, investigators found a box-cutter similar to one left where the girl was attacked, Matheson said. In addition, police confiscated clothing similar to that described by the victim, Matheson wrote.
Baker denied the rape when detectives questioned him last week.
According to documents, Baker told detectives: “Why would I have to rape anyone? I can get girls anytime.”
Talk to us
> Give us your news tips.
> Send us a letter to the editor.
> More Herald contact information.