Local

Ambulance rape trial: Former EMT found not guilty, all charges dismissed

Ambulance rape trial: Former EMT found not guilty, all charges dismissed

Samuel Rutherford reacts to the jury's not guilty verdict during the trial, April 25, 2024. (Jordan Renfro) Photo: Clarksville Now


CLARKSVILLE, TN (CLARKSVILLE NOW) – After three days of testimony and two hours and 15 minutes of jury deliberation, former EMT Samuel Rutherford, charged with two counts of rape, was found not guilty by a jury.

On March 10, 2017, Clarksville police responded to a call on Alfred Thun Road in Clarksville concerning an incident involving an emergency medical technician (EMT) who was transporting a patient from a hospital in Nashville. Rutherford, then 20 years old and from Hendersonville, was in the rear of the private ambulance with a female patient. The victim told law enforcement Rutherford forced her to perform oral sex on him.

After listening to all of the witness testimony and evidence presented, a jury of Rutherford’s peers on Thursday found him not guilty.

District Attorney General Robert Nash presents his closing arguments to the jury during the trial for Samuel Rutherford, April 25, 2024. (Jordan Renfro)

A missed opportunity

District Attorney General Nash led his closing argument by repeating the phrase, “I wasn’t going to miss out on an opportunity,” which is what the defendant told Clarksville Police detectives after the incident seven years ago.

Nash told the jury that in order for there to be reasonable doubt about the rape charge, they had to believe that after the victim underwent two major back surgeries – the second resulting in a three-day hospital stay where she was routinely drugged and sedated – the first thing she wanted to do after an hour in an ambulance was to perform oral sex on a 20-year-old stranger.

“Nothing in the law says jurors have to leave their common sense and life experiences outside the door of the courtroom,” Nash said. “You bring those with you. Does that sound reasonable? That the victim, in that condition, initiated anything with Mr. Rutherford? Or did he seize an opportunity to fill his desire with a helpless patient strapped to the bed?”

Nash read directly from the defendant’s statement he made in 2017.

“I just, like, I wasn’t thinking. I’m 20 versus 43, and I haven’t been around the block, per se. So, I wasn’t going to, I guess, miss out on an opportunity, and I should have. I should have stopped everything that was going on and talked to my partner and talked to my supervisor, and let them know that it had happened. But, instead, I tried to play it off, like it was an OK thing to do, and that’s part of the reason I wanted to take my life. It wasn’t because I didn’t want to be in trouble; it was because I felt so terrible for what I had done to someone who can’t even say yes or no.”

Defense Attorney Jeff Grimes presents his closing arguments to the jury during the trial for his client, Samuel Rutherford, April 25, 2024. (Jordan Renfro)

An opportunity for money

Jeff Grimes, Rutherford’s defense attorney, doubled down on the victim’s ability to consent, and he suggested that she saw this as an opportunity to get money from a lawsuit.

“We know she wasn’t physically helpless because we heard her talking in the back of the ambulance,” Grimes told the jury, referring to the police interview at the scene. “You heard her voice, there was no slurring, she was very clear, her memory appeared to be very clear and she spoke rapidly.”

“And there’s something else. Right away, the gratuitous offering of, ‘I’m not a whore, I’m not that kind of lady,'” Grimes said. “Isn’t that kind of weird? First thing she wants to offer up is, ‘I’m not a whore’? Just like someone who’s, maybe, protesting a little too much.”

He discussed the convenience of the victim testifying that she couldn’t remember anything other than waking up with a man’s genitals in her mouth.

“You know why that’s really convenient? For this lawsuit she’s got filed!” Grimes told the jurors. “She doesn’t even know how much money she’s suing for. That’s her opportunity. That’s her opportunity to make bank because she participated in something, willfully, knowingly, and then regretted it as soon as they got caught.”

Grimes told the jury he doubts the victim doesn’t remember anything, and he could tell that some of the jurors didn’t believe her either.

He explained that his client was on a shame spiral after being told by his partner he was going to jail, told by a police officer that he was going to pay, and then shackled to the wall in an interrogation room.

“Just because the government wants you to convict somebody doesn’t mean you have to,” Grimes said to the jury. “Don’t let her use her opportunity to make some dollars.”

Samuel Rutherford stands at the defense table as his charges are dismissed during the trial, April 25, 2024. (Jordan Renfro)

Not guilty verdict

With closing arguments finished, the jury retired to deliberate. About two hours later, they returned with a verdict. A tense silence filled the divided courtroom: on one side, Rutherford’s family and friends, and on the other, the victim and her family.

The foreman stood and read the verdict: not guilty on both charges. Immediately, Rutherford appeared to take a gasp of air. He relaxed into his seat and let his head fall back as he looked up at the ceiling in relief.

Judge Robert Bateman thanked the jury and dismissed them, then asked Rutherford and his counsel to rise. With tears running down his face, Rutherford and his attorneys, Timothy Warren and Grimes, stood.

“Mr. Samuel Paul Rutherford, a jury of your peers has found you not guilty as to count one of your indictments, and not guilty as to count two of your indictment. The charges against you are dismissed.”

Outside the courtroom, some of the jurors spoke with Clarksville Now. They said the decision was based on the judge’s instructions, and they said there were inconsistencies in testimony that left them with reasonable doubt. Clarksville Now does not identify jury members.

PREVIOUSLY:

Latest Headlines

Updated

today in High Schools, News, Sports

UPDATE: Fort Campbell football rescheduled, Sen. McConnell urges DoD to allow exceptions

Sen. Mitch McConnell of Kentucky is seeking an exemption to the government shutdown that will allow Fort Campbell High School to play football tonight.

yesterday in Business, News

200-acre rezoning approved, clearing way for Freedom Farms, major retailer in Clarksville

The Clarksville City Council approved the second reading of 200-acre rezoning case Thursday night.

Northwest High School assistant football coach Trey Campbell leads the team in prayer during the FCHS Jamboree on Aug. 15, 2025. (Hannah Walker)

yesterday in High Schools, News, Sports

Campbell removed from coaching over ‘proselytizing,’ transfers from SRO to deputy patrol

Northwest High School assistant football coach and School Resource Officer Trey Campbell has left his position as an SRO.

Police respond to a shooting near Main Street and University Avenue on Oct. 1, 2025. (Dash 10 Media)

yesterday in Crime, News

UPDATE: 22-year-old dies from injuries in shooting near Franklin Street

The victim in Wednesday night’s shooting near 501 Franklin St. in Clarksville has died from his injuries.

yesterday in News

Woodstock flooding solutions to be presented at neighborhood meeting

The City of Clarksville announced Thursday they will hold a Woodstock neighborhood meeting to announce details of an action plan for flood mitigation in the area.

Latest Headlines

5 hours ago in National, Trending

Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs is set to be sentenced and faces the possibility of years in prison

Sean "Diddy" Combs faces sentencing Friday in a sordid criminal case that could keep him locked up for years.

5 hours ago in Entertainment, Music

Decoding Taylor Swift’s ‘The Life a Showgirl’: A guide to her references

For Taylor Swift's most dedicated audience, a new album means new opportunities to decode Easter eggs in her lyrics and music videos. The pop superstar's 12th studio album has no shortage of clever clues and references to her public life and discography.

22 hours ago in Entertainment

Beloved ‘Reading Rainbow’ returns after nearly 20 years with new host Mychal Threets

After nearly 20 years, the beloved, long-running children's series "Reading Rainbow" is back, this time on the KidZuko YouTube channel.

22 hours ago in Entertainment

Kim Kardashian and Kris Jenner sue Ray J for defamation over racketeering claims

Kim Kardashian and her mother, Kris Jenner, are suing her ex-boyfriend Ray J for saying they are under federal investigation and on the verge of being indicted.

1 day ago in National, Trending

Trump uses government shutdown to dole out firings and punishment

President Donald Trump has seized on the government shutdown as an opportunity to reshape the federal workforce and punish detractors, by threatening mass firings of workers and suggesting "irreversible" cuts to programs important to Democrats.