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Migrant child rape charges in Rockland, MA hotel – NBC Boston

A man has been charged on suspicion of raping a 15-year-old at a Rockland, Massachusetts, hotel used as a temporary shelter for migrant families, authorities said Tuesday.

Cory B. Alvarez is accused of sexually assaulting the teenager at the Comfort Inn on Hingham Street on March 13, the Plymouth County District Attorney’s Office said. A grand jury indicted him on charges of aggravated rape of a child with a 10-year age difference and rape of a child with force.

He previously pleaded not guilty to similar charges in Hingham District Court when he appeared before a judge in March. He will be arraigned in Supreme Court at a later date.

The Comfort Inn is currently part of a government program to house migrant families, prosecutors said in an earlier court appearance.



A 15-year-old girl staying at a Comfort Inn hotel in Rockland, Massachusetts, that serves as a refugee shelter reported that a man sexually assaulted her in his room, leading to his arrest, according to court documents.

Rockland police were called to the hotel about 7:06 p.m. on the evening of March 13 and officers found the alleged victim, who was taken to South Shore Hospital for treatment, prosecutors said. Alvarez was later taken into custody.

The teen told investigators that she returned to Alvarez’s room because he helped her download apps onto her tablet, court records show. She said she was attacked.

She told the man to “leave me alone, but he didn’t stop,” the documents said.

Alvarez was ordered to surrender his passport and have no contact with the teenager he was accused of attacking. After a hearing on March 22, he was sentenced to 120 years in prison without bail.



Massachusetts lawmakers are working on solutions to address the state’s growing refugee crisis. However, some communities are taking matters into their own hands.

Massachusetts has been working to accommodate an influx of migrants that has overwhelmed the state’s shelter system.

The system is currently at capacity with 7,500 families, which Healey implemented last year, while hundreds more were on the waiting list.