MEMPHIS, Tenn. — A Tennessee man was sentenced to 80 years in prison Friday for raping a woman a year before he was charged with kidnapping and killing a school teacher who was on an early morning run.
Cleotha Abston, whose history of criminal charges dates back to the 1990s when he was a juvenile, received 40 years in prison for aggravated rape, 20 years for aggravated kidnapping and another 20 years for being a felon in possession of a weapon. The sentences will run consecutively, or one after the other, Shelby County Criminal Court Judge Lee Coffee ruled.
Abston, 40, was convicted April 12 of raping a woman while holding her at gunpoint in September 2021. The victim said she had been raped after meeting Abston on a social dating site and agreeing to meet him at his apartment. A jury found Abston covered the woman's face with a T-shirt, walked her outside the apartment and raped her in the backseat of his girlfriend's vehicle.
Coffee said Abston treated the victim with ''exceptional cruelty.''
Abston waived a sentencing hearing in which witnesses could have testified for or against him. His lawyer, Juni Ganguli, said waiving a sentencing hearing meant they were able to avoid a ''circus'' in court. Prosecutor Paul Hagerman said Abston received what is ''effectively a life sentence.''
Ganguli said he plans to appeal the conviction and he will file a motion for a new trial.
''We had a strong defense,'' Ganguli told reporters outside court Friday. ''I do not believe for a second that he raped or kidnapped or had a gun, that he put a gun to that woman."
Abston was not charged in the 2021 rape case until after being charged with snatching Eliza Fletcher from a street while she was jogging before dawn near the University of Memphis on Sept. 2, 2022, and forcing her into an SUV. Her body was found days later near a vacant duplex.