Kalen Schlatter testifies he did not sexually assault or kill Tess Richey
TORONTO — A Toronto man accused of sexually assaulting and strangling a young woman he had just met testified Monday that she initiated their early-morning sexual encounter and was alive when he left her.
Kalen Schlatter, 23, denied causing Tess Richey’s death or harming her in any way as he gave his account of what happened the night the 22-year-old woman went missing in November 2017.
Schlatter, who has pleaded not guilty to first-degree murder, said Richey was the one who made the first move, asking if she could kiss him after her friend left them alone in Toronto’s gay village.
He told jurors Richey led him down a driveway and a set of stairs, where they continued to “kiss, make out, feel each other up” for about 40 minutes. Schlatter said he mentioned having condoms, but Richey told him they could not have sex because she was on her period.