Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Boro man sent to prison for trail assaults

- By Michael P. Rellahan

WEST CHESTER >> A Downingtow­n man who suffers from mental health issues was sentenced to almost a year behind bars for grabbing women on the Struble Trial. After the verdict was read Monday, he briefly fled the courtroom before being taken into custody.

Rickey Lee Endy had been charged with a variety of offenses following his arrest in May 2019, and had pleaded guilty to two counts of indecent assault, a second degree misdemeano­r punishable by up to two years in prison, in October.

When Endy, who acknowledg­ed having been treated for depression and anxiety in the past, heard Judge Jeffery Sommer say he intended to sentence him to 11-½ to 23 months in Chester County Prison on the first count, Endy, 61, bolted from the courtroom and ran down the hallway. He was quickly taken into custody by deputy sheriffs and returned to the courtroom.

Endy apparently appeared unsteady of his feet, and was later transporte­d to Chester County Hospital for treatment before being taken to the prison later Monday. He returned to Sommer’s courtroom Tuesday to complete the sentencing proceeding.

As part of the sentence, Sommer ordered that Endy undergo a mental health evaluation, and to follow any recommende­d treatment afterwards. He will also have to comply with registrati­on as a sex offender under the state’s Megan’s Law.

Endy was arrested by Downingtow­n Police Sgt.

Roger Meinhart after two woman identified him as the man who had grabbed them while they were walking or jogging on the Struble Trail. Another woman reported at the same time that he had tried to assault her in a similar way prior to that day but had missed.

According to the criminal complaint filed against him, on May 19, 2019, around 10:30 a.m. police received a report of a man who had assaulted a woman on the hiking and biking trial, which runs along the East Branch of the Brandywine

Creek from Downingtow­n north to Uwchlan through East Caln and East Brandywine.

Meinhart said that Officer Kevin Coyle made contact with a woman who said she was jogging north on the trial near the Route 30 overpass when a man on a bicycle rode past her. As he did, he reached out and grabbed her buttocks and said, “Hey, baby.”

As Coyle was radioing in the informatio­n about the assault and a descriptio­n of the alleged assailant, a man fitting that descriptio­n rode past him and the woman, and just behind him was another woman running and pointing at him, saying he had just assaulted her. The first woman was able to identify the bicyclist as the person who had just assaulted her.

Coyle and Meinhart were able to detain the man, later identified as Endy, at the Kardon Park entrance to the trail. There, the two women said he had been the person who assaulted them, while a third woman arrived to say she had seen the man trying to grab other women on the trail as he passed them on his bicycle, but had missed.

Charges of harassment and disorderly conduct were withdrawn in exchange for Endy’s plea to the two counts of indecent assault.

The case was prosecuted by Assistant District Attorney Stefanie Friedman, while Endy was represente­d by Assistant Public Defender Nikola Filipi.

Bill de Blasio just learned the hard way: Don’t pick fights with hockey players.

The New York mayor got his jersey pulled over his head and a few of his proverbial teeth knocked out this weekend after the city’s hockey community came pouring over the boards to stop him from shutting down two ice rinks in Central Park in a pathetic attempt to punish Donald Trump.

The Trump Organizati­on has run the park’s open-air rinks since the 1980s, and its contract with the city is up in April. But de Blasio was not willing to simply let the contract expire; he wanted to take credit for ejecting Trump from the rinks. So, he decided to terminate the Trump Organizati­on’s contract early. “Trump has been impeached from operating the ice rink,” a de Blasio spokesman boasted. The New York Times cheered the mayor on, writing that de Blasio’s decision was “another blow to Mr. Trump’s prestige in New York, and hammered home the depths to which the president -- once viewed as a mischievou­s real estate celebrity -- has become a political and social pariah in his hometown.” But there was one small problem. Central Park’s Lasker Rink is the home of Ice Hockey in Harlem, a charitable organizati­on that teaches more than 300 underserve­d kids in Harlem each year how to play hockey. The group -- co-founded by my childhood friend Todd Levy, who now serves as chairman of the board -- holds practices at Lasker each week between October and March, as well as classroom sessions and mentoring activities for the kids. The organizati­on was informed Friday, Feb. 19, that the rink would close by that Sunday, to give the Trump Organizati­on time to leave before the lease’s terminatio­n on Feb. 26. The kids’ season had already been cut short on the front end by the pandemic. Now de Blasio was kicking them off the ice more than a month early to get back at Trump. “They hate Trump so much, they don’t care who they hurt,” Levy told me.

Of course, the mayor’s vindictive­ness wasn’t going to hurt Trump at all. The city would have to pay the Trump Organizati­on over $30 million, according to a company spokeswoma­n. The early terminatio­n was nothing more than a PR stunt by de Blasio so he could be seen on the news as sticking it to the former president.

It didn’t work out the way he expected. Craig Stanton, an Ice Hockey in Harlem board member and PR executive, soon had local TV news screens filled with images of poor, minority kids talking about how de Blasio had ended their hockey season. WCBS in New York showed pictures of kids skating for the last time, as a correspond­ent declared it “a picture-perfect winter wonderland in Central Park, if not for the heartbroke­n skaters, the season abruptly cut short” by the mayor.

Ice Hockey in Harlem director Malik Garvin (who started with the organizati­on as a 3-yearold skater) told the network, “Everyone was absolutely devastated, every kid, their parents, their coaches.”

Garvin appeared on “Fox & Friends Weekend,” where he explained, “I had to tell 300 kids and their parents, ‘That’s it, we’re done,’” adding that he was told the rinks were being closed “in retaliatio­n for the storming of the Capitol, which our kids, our families had nothing to do with.”

Things got even worse for de Blasio when it turned out his sad swipe at Trump wasn’t only ending the hockey season early for poor, minority children, but for special needs skaters as well.

Lasker is also home to the Central Park North Stars, a hockey program for children and adults with developmen­tal disabiliti­es. “We are the only special needs hockey program in the NYC metro area,” program director Bill Tobias told Yahoo Sports. “This was the only outdoor activity and badly needed social interactio­n that our players have had for months.”

By Sunday night, Feb. 21, de Blasio cried uncle. Little wonder a January Sienna College poll found de Blasio with a meager 28%p approval rating among New Yorkers -- two points lower than Trump. He was so blinded by his hatred for Trump that he took it out on a bunch of poor and disabled hockey players. He picked the wrong adversary. As Levy says, “Hockey players know how to fight.”

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