Earlier bus attack victim of man charged in CTA rape says assault could have been prevented with earlier action

Earlier victim of man charged in CTA rape says system failed to stop him

A woman who was attacked by the man charged with sexually assaulting a woman in a wheelchair at a CTA station said that crime should not have happened, and wouldn't have if the city hadn't failed to step in.

The accused attacker's name is Rasheed Griffin, and he has a long criminal past. Police said the 23-year-old attacked another woman, who asked to be called Monae and whose identity CBS News Chicago is protecting, as she got off a CTA bus near Midway.

"The man just approached me and started punching me," she recalled. "This first punch sent me flying to the ground. I hit my head on the ground, and from there he was just over me, punching, punching."

She said the attack lasted seconds, but the trauma lingers.

"For a while, I was afraid to go outside," she said. "I'm just making sure I'm not by myself and I know that's not a good mental state."

A police report states Griffin was immediately arrested, but a detective said no felony charges would be pursued. Instead, he was charged with misdemeanor battery and released on an ankle monitor with an overnight curfew and ordered not to commit new crime on the CTA. But police say he did, just days later.

"I feel like we were failed by the city. Clearly he's a threat," Monae said.

While on his monitor, Griffin was arrested for not paying his fare and trespassing on the CTA. Then he failed to show up for court in Monae's case. When law enforcement found him days later, Griffin was locked up but he was free two days later, this time without a monitor, after pleading guilty in Monae's case.

He was sentenced to 35 days, which he had already spent on an ankle monitor.

"If y'all would've acted and took it more seriously, a more serios crime would have been prevented," Monae said.

Three days after Griffin was released, police said he attacked a woman in a wheelchair on the Red Line, wheeling her off the train and sexually assaulting her in an elevator.

"This could have been prevented," Monae said. "I feel like I was a warning for her."

Before either of those women had been attacked, in October, Griffin was arrested for an indecent sexual act, once again on the CTA, CBS News Chicago found.

"I don't feel like anybody fought for me. I don't feel like I mattered. I feel like I was robbed of my security," Monae said. "I just feel like we need a better plan or a better system."

After getting caught for the Red Line sexual assault, documents show Griffin said he was suffering from mental health concerns. Leading up to the attack, Griffin was also accused of several other crimes, including drug possession and resisting arrest. In those cases, charges were dropped. 

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