Suspect indicted in rape of Roland Park grandmother

A Baltimore City man has been indicted in the high-profile armed home invasion and rape of a grandmother in Roland Park, prosecutors said Tuesday.

A Baltimore City grand jury indicted Roger Ervin, 46, of the 3500 block of Dudley Avenue, on first-degree rape, assault and sex offense charges after police found a DNA match in the state?s database tying him to the crime. He faces up to life in prison.

The indictment means police have stronger evidence against Ervin than the previous man they arrested, whom they had to set free after DNA evidence exonerated him in September.

At about 8 p.m. Aug. 23, a 59-year-old grandmother was inher kitchen on the 700 block of Colorado Avenue when two unknown men entered her house, and one raped her during a robbery, police said.

The woman had returned home from shopping and left her keys in the front door while retrieving groceries, police said.

After unloading the items, she began making dinner ? and while standing at the stove, she heard footsteps behind her, according to court documents.

“When she turned around, the suspects were in her kitchen, both pointing handguns at her,” Detective Sarah Connolly wrote in charging documents.

The suspects took her wallet ? which had $7 in it ? and then one forced her upstairs, where he raped her, police said.

During the attack, the woman told the suspects that she “was a grandmother and was to have a party for her grandchildren;” she couldn?t get up because she felt “paralyzed”; and begged, “please don?t rape me,” charging documents state.

Police initially charged Chaz Ricks, 20, of Gwynn Oak, as a suspect after the victim provided a description of her attackers. A sketch artist depicted a rendering of a suspect, which a detective identified as Ricks, police said.

But prosecutors in September dropped all charges against Ricks a month later after DNA evidence proved he was not involved.

On March 11, police received notice that Ervin?s DNA matched the rapist?s.

Ervin?s DNA was on file because of his 1985 conviction for robbery with a deadly weapon in Baltimore County and his conviction for conspiracy to commit theft in Anne Arundel in 1992, court records show.

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