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Man gets 8-year sentence for attacking volleyball Olympian in LA


US attacker Kim Glass (R) spikes the ball over Serbian blockers Stefana Veljkovic (L-#17) and Jelena Nikolic (C-#1) during their match at the women’s World Cup volleyball tournament at Nippon Gaishi Hall in Nagoya, Nov. 14, 2007. Serbia beat the US 28-26, 23-25, 25-20, 25-23. (File photo by KAZUHIRO NOGI/AFP/Getty Images)

LOS ANGELES — A parolee pleaded no contest Tuesday to an allegedly unprovoked attack on an Olympic silver medal-winning volleyball player, who testified in March that she had never seen the man before.

Semeon Tesfamariam, now 53, was immediately sentenced to eight years in state prison following his plea to assault with a deadly weapon along with his admission that he had a prior strike, according to the Los Angeles County District Attorney’s Office.

Tesfamariam was accused of throwing a 10-inch metal bolt at Kim Glass’ face on July 8, 2022.

Glass, a fitness model and trainer, told CBS Los Angeles the sentence was “like a little slap in the face.” Glass said she’s worried she won’t be Tesfamariam’s last victim.

She said that’s because Tesfamariam may only serve three years because of double credit for the last 15 months he’s already spent in jail and potential incentives for good behavior.

At a March 16 hearing in which Tesfamariam was ordered to stand trial, Glass testified that she was looking at a friend’s new car at Olive and Eighth streets in downtown Los Angeles after eating lunch, and saw Tesfamariam – – whom she identified during the hearing in the downtown Los Angeles courtroom – – scurrying in her direction with a shiny metal object in his hand.

“He was like looking at me, like really deep into my eyes,” she said, indicating that he appeared to be angry and that it looked like he “hated me.”

“I’ve never seen him before in my life,” she said of the defendant, whom she said glared at her but “never said anything to me.”

Glass — who was an outside hitter on the 2008 U.S. Olympic women’s indoor volleyball team — said she thought he might hit her friend’s vehicle.

She testified that she went to turn, saw him move and then felt pain to her head.

“I didn’t know what hit me,” Glass said.

She said she fell after the attack, started seeing blood and saw the bolt on the ground.

She said she suffered multiple fractures around her eye, had more than 40 stitches to her face and that she experienced “a lot of pain,” and still has lingering medical issues.

Others subdued the assailant and held him until police arrived, she said.

“I heard him say, `It wasn’t me,”‘ Glass testified, while noting that she wasn’t sure if he was being detained at that point because she was covering her left eye while she was on the ground.

Tesfamariam was taken into custody that afternoon by Los Angeles police, and has remained behind bars since then.

In a statement announcing the case against Tesfamariam last year, District Attorney George Gascón called it “a brutal, unprovoked attack.”

“Mr. Tesfamariam has a troubling history of attacking apparently random people with dangerous weapons,” Gascón said then. “His behavior appears to have escalated with time.”

Tesfamariam’s first felony assault occurred in 2018 and the second in 2019, according to the District Attorney’s Office, which noted that he was initially sentenced to probation and later was sentenced to state prison and was on parole at the time of the attack on Glass.

His arraignment was initially delayed last year when criminal proceedings were suspended after a doubt was declared about his mental competency. He subsequently pleaded not guilty later that month.

The Daily News staff contributed to this story.





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