


“I wish that I could just take it back,” Rini said. “I am sorry to the family.”
Kyle Healey, an assistant U.S. attorney, admonished Rini for causing “unnecessary pain” by raising false hope for relatives of Timmothy Pitzen, an Aurora boy who disappeared at age 6 in 2011.
Rini, who will get credit for time served, had shown up in northern Kentucky in early April 2019 claiming to be Timmothy Pitzen. He told authorities he had just escaped captors who sexually and physically abused him for years.
Confronted with DNA results proving he wasn’t the missing Aurora boy, Rini said he had watched a story about the boy on ABC’s “20/20” and wanted to get away from his own family, th
Barrett told Rini earlier this year he faced a mandatory two-year sentence, but the judge wanted to see results of a presentencing investigation before entering his sentence. Rini will be released on probation in less than four months.
Rini earlier pleaded guilty to aggravated identity theft. Prosecutors dismissed two other charges.
He twice portrayed himself in Ohio as a juvenile victim of sex trafficking, and in each case was identified after being fingerprinted, authorities have said.
Timmothy Pitzen was 6 when his father dropped him off at Greenman Elementary School in Aurora on May 11, 2011.
Notes she left behind stated her son was safe but would never be found.