Kelly was charged with committing two rapes within a four-day period in Darien, Connecticut, in 1986. He was charged first with the rape of a 16-year-old Stamford girl, and then of a teenager in Darien. In one of the rapes, according to the police, he encountered a girl who lived near him and offered her a ride home from a party. He was later also charged with drug possession and two counts of kidnapping. In addition to those cases, five other women have told prosecutors and an author that Kelly raped them when he was a teen, although he has never been charged with those attacks. Before his trial was due to begin in 1987, Kelly fled the United States and spent the next seven years on the run, mostly in Europe. Kelly's parents allegedly supported him financially during this seven-year period, although they may have been unaware of his exact locations. Law enforcement authorities suspected that the parents had been in contact with their son and, on at least one occasion, raided the parents' house in an attempt to find evidence of Kelly's location or their assistance to him. In 1995, the Connecticut State Police discovered photos in the Kelly home of Alex with his parents in Europe the previous year. His parents were charged with obstruction, after which Kelly surrendered in Switzerland. He was extradited to the United States on rape and kidnapping charges. Several lesser counts were excluded, as they were not specifically listed in the extradition treaty between the two nations. While out on bail, Kelly was allowed by the court to take classes at Norwalk Community College. Kelly faced two trials in 1997. After the first was declared a mistrial, the second resulted in his conviction for the first rape and a sentence of 10 years in prison. He pleaded no contest to the second rape and was sentenced to an additional 10 years in prison. In 2005, after having served eight years of his 10-year sentence, Kelly appeared before a Connecticut parole board; his bid for release was rejected. At the hearing Kelly apologized many times saying he was "hypercompetitive" and self-centered, and that he has finally realized that the world is bigger than him. On November 24, 2007, Kelly was released from prison on good behavior. He is required to serve 10 years probation, perform 200 hours of community service, pay a $10,000 fine, and register with the Connecticut sex offender registry. Kelly has claimed that, while in prison, he earned a bachelor's degree in economics and third-world development. Kelly worked for six years, until 2014, as a skydiving instructor in Ellington, Connecticut. According to a 2015 Associated Press article, Kelly eventually left Connecticut Parachutists due to erratic behavior that involved punching one skydiver for touching his equipment and groping a male skydiver's genitals. Labor Department documents obtained by the AP through a Freedom of Information request showed that Kelly had also threatened a pilot with bodily harm in an argument over use of an aircraft. In August 2015, he was reported to have purchased a Cessna 182 airplane, and to have filed paperwork starting his own businesses, Freefall Aviation LLC and Para-Lease LLC. As of February 2017, Kelly is a certified flight instructor and is the owner of Green Mountain Skydiving in Bennington, Vermont. As of May 2018 Kelly is also the owner and tandem skydive instructor of Berkshire Skydiving in North Adams, Massachusetts. He participates in tandem jumps with both female and male customers. It was reported in October 2018 that Kelly's Green Mountain skydiving had its lease with Bennington Airport terminated by the state of Vermont the previous month over safety violations.
Portrayals in the media
Alex Kelly's story was recounted in an episode of Dominick Dunne's Court TV seriesDominick Dunne's Power, Privilege, and Justice. It was also dramatized in the television movie , a two-hour production originally broadcast on March 16, 1999. Kelly was portrayed by actor Matthew Settle in the telefilm. The Kelly case was also featured in an episode of A&E Network's series American Justice. Alex Kelly's case was also featured on ABC's news magazine show, Turning Point, whose segment title was "Fugitive Son: The Hunt for Alex Kelly." Vanity Fair Confidential aired an episode entitled "The Fugitive Son" on January 23, 2017. It was the third-season premiere episode broadcast on the Investigative Discovery channel. At the end of the episode, it was revealed that four other women had come forward during the time Kelly was on the run, saying that they also had been raped by him.