Woman Escaped After Being Kidnapped, Assaulted &
Handcuffed
NASHVILLE, Tenn. – February 27, 2020 – Roy Nellsch, 63, of
Logan, Alabama, was indicted yesterday by a federal grand jury in Nashville,
and charged with kidnapping, possession of child pornography and transportation
of child pornography, announced U.S. Attorney Don Cochran for the Middle
District of Tennessee. Nellsch was
transferred from the Montgomery County, Tennessee jail to federal custody
earlier today and will make an initial appearance before a U.S. Magistrate
Judge later this afternoon.
According to the indictment and documents filed with the
Court, on May 22, 2019, Nellsch, a long-haul trucker for more than 40 years,
encountered a woman with car trouble on I-24, near Fort Campbell, Kentucky. The
woman’s car was out of gas and Nellsch offered to give her a ride to the next
exit, which was Exit 1 in Tennessee. The
woman accepted the ride and got into the truck and Nellsch proceeded to drive
eastbound on I-24. When Nellsch
continued past Exit 1 and Exit 4, the woman became scared and started
screaming.
Nellsch then pulled over on the exit ramp at Exit 8 and
pointed a handgun at the woman and told her he was kidnapping her and was going
to rape her. Nellsch ordered the woman
into the sleeper part of the cab where he began assaulting her and ripped her
dress. During the struggle, the woman
was able to turn the gun toward Nellsch and pull the trigger but it did not
fire. Nellsch produced another handgun
and struck the woman in the head. He
then handcuffed the woman, placed a blanket over her, and continued driving
along Interstate 24.
As Nellsch was driving, the woman was able to slip one hand
out of the handcuffs. She then placed
the blanket over Nellsch’s head and placed one arm around his throat while she
attempted to steer the truck and honk the horn with the other hand and screamed
for him to pull over. Nellsch pulled the
truck to the side of road, took the remaining handcuff off the woman and she
got out of the truck and flagged down oncoming motorists for help. Nellsch drove away from the scene and was
stopped and arrested a short time later in Springfield, Tennessee.
A subsequent search of the truck by law enforcement
produced, among other items, two handguns; a stun gun; handcuffs; bags
containing numerous pairs of women’s underwear and bras and numerous electronic
devices, including a digital camera, laptop computers, cell phones, and media
storage devices. A subsequent examination of the electronic devices found over
10,000 images and videos of child pornography, including videos depicting
violence against small children and a ledger with lists of names, ages,
locations and descriptions of women and children.
If convicted, Nellsch faces up to life in prison.
Agencies participating in this investigation include the
FBI; the Department of Homeland Security-Immigration & Customs Enforcement;
the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation; and the Clarksville Police Department;
with valuable assistance from the Coopertown Police Department and the
Springfield Police Department. Assistant
U.S Attorney Brooke K. Schiferle is prosecuting the case.
An indictment is merely an accusation. The defendant is presumed innocent until
proven guilty in a court of law.
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