Crime & Safety
Ex Coachella Valley Baseball Player Sentenced For Sexual Assault
Trent William Pell, formerly with a Palm Springs summer league baseball team, was sentenced to prison Friday for assault and sexual battery.

COACHELLA VALLEY, CA -- Trent William Pell, who was formerly a player with a Palm Springs Power summer league baseball team, was sentenced to four years in prison on Friday for felony assault with intent to commit rape and misdemeanor sexual battery.
The crimes involved a 20-year-old woman whom Pell met at an Indio house party nearly five years ago. Pell, 26, was convicted of the two charges on May 30 by a jury that acquitted him of one felony count each of raping an unconscious victim and raping an intoxicated victim.
Pell was ordered to stand trial in October 2015, and remained free on a $200,000 bond amid more than 40 continuances in the case before it reached trial.
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Prosecutors alleged that Pell raped the unnamed woman while she was passed out on June 16, 2014, at a get-together at a home in the 81800 block of Sandy Court. The victim ``drank heavily'' that afternoon and didn't wake up when several witnesses entered the room and saw Pell having sex with her, Indio police Cpl. Leonardo Perafan wrote in a arrest warrant declaration.
Afterward, Pell left his cell phone and wallet -- which contained identifying information -- at the scene and returned to his native Michigan, according to Perafan, who said Indio police worked with their counterparts in Michigan to track him down.
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In testimony during Pell's trial in May, Indio police Officer Ricardo Cerna, who was the first officer to arrive at the Sandy Court home, said he found the victim so severely intoxicated that she was unable to provide a statement about the alleged rape.
``She appeared she had no idea what was going on,'' Cerna said.
One witness told Cerna that when she found Pell in a closed room at the party with the young woman, ``she stood in his way to block him'' from leaving. However, Pell was able to get around the witness and flee the scene before law enforcement arrived, the officer said. The witness, according to Cerna, appeared coherent and reasonable, even though she was also under the
influence of alcohol.
Pell was in the Coachella Valley playing for the Palm Springs Power, part of the Southern California Collegiate Baseball League, which recruits college athletes to play baseball in June and July.
Shortly after the rape allegations were made, Pell was released by the Power ``for disciplinary reasons,'' according to the team president.
City News Service contributed to this report.
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