Crime & Safety
Framingham Rape Suspect Held On $2 Million Bail
New reports detail Stephen Paul Gale's living situation in the days before his arrest after decades on the run from a 1989 rape.
This story was updated on Aug. 21 at 11:52 a.m.
FRAMINGHAM, MA — Docked in a marina in the Wilmington area of Los Angeles was a yacht named The Dior.
That yacht, according to a new report from WCVB, was Stephen Paul Gale's home in the days prior to his arrest on charges stemming from a 1989 Framingham rape. Gale was apparently aware of law enforcement's interest in him, as another report from the publication found he mutilated his own fingertips to make his prints less useful to authorities.
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Gale was identified and charged with four counts of aggravated rape, two counts of kidnapping, and one count of armed robbery in connection with an incident at the "Hit or Miss" store in Framingham on Dec. 27, 1989.
Gale, who used aliases as part of a decades-long life on the run, was taken into custody after a police chase through Los Angeles on Thursday. State officials said he is entitled to a hearing relative to rendition proceedings before his return to Massachusetts.
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Gale has missed several court dates in California due to what officials have called health issues.
Additional reporting found that Gale is being held on $2 million bail after he was charged with grand theft of personal property and check forgery.
The victims were two women, ages 18 and 29, who were operating the store on Route 9, officials said during a news conference at the time, which featured Middlesex District Attorney Marian Ryan, Framingham Police Chief Lester Baker, and the United States Marshals Service.
Gale is accused of entering the store and approaching one of the women for help in selecting an outfit.
He is then accused of drawing a gun and forcing them into the back of the store, demanding that the older woman empty the store's cash register and her purse and give him the money.
Gale is then accused of taking the younger woman into the front of the store and having her write a note saying that the store would not open until later, before sexually assaulting both women in the back of the store.
Officials said Gale kept the two women in separate locked rooms but, when he eventually went back into the front of the store, the two women escaped out of a fire exit. They ran through backyards until they reached a home where they sought help.
During the assaults, Gale instructed the women not to look at him, threatening that, if they did, he would use the gun in his possession, officials said. However, both women were able to provide investigators with "important information" about his appearance.
This helped investigators — along with forensic evidence — develop a DNA profile of Gale. The profile was eventually uploaded in 2001 to a database, but a connection wasn't made until 2022 when a contract was reached with a company to create new genealogy-based leads.
Though Gale hasn't officially been connected to other crimes — his identity was discovered through genealogy work, not a connection to other crime scenes — Ryan said other incidents in the Boston metro area in 1989 were believed to be done by the same person responsible for these two assaults.
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