THE APEX TIMES
Louisville man sentenced to 20 years after pleading guilty to raping and sodomizing two underage girls
Eduardo Mansilla-Torrez entered a guilty plea in Jefferson County and received a 20-year sentence with no probation or shock probation on the first counts, court-related officials said.
A Louisville man, Eduardo Mansilla-Torrez, was sentenced to 20 years in prison after pleading guilty to rape and sodomy involving two underage girls, according to a report from WLKY. The sentencing occurred the same day as the guilty plea, which was entered as part of an agreement in Jefferson County, officials with the Commonwealth’s Attorney’s office said in connection with the case.
The report said Mansilla-Torrez’s plea resulted in convictions spanning multiple counts. Prosecutors identified two counts of rape and two counts of sodomy, along with five counts of wanton endangerment. The sentence also included convictions for distribution of obscene matter to minors, with three counts, and two counts of indecent exposure, according to the WLKY summary.
WLKY reported that Jefferson County Commonwealth’s Attorney Gerina D. Whethers said the case reflects the seriousness of crimes against children and that her office is committed to protecting them. The statement, as quoted in the report, framed the prosecution and sentencing as part of that effort.
According to the reporting, Mansilla-Torrez is not eligible for probation or shock probation on his first four counts because those offenses are classified as violent. The same report said he must serve at least 85% of his sentence on those charges before he can become eligible for parole consideration, setting a lengthy period of confinement before any potential release review.
The report also said the sentence requires additional supervision and treatment obligations. Mansilla-Torrez is required to complete a sex offender treatment program with the Kentucky Department of Corrections, and he will face five years of post-incarceration supervision after he completes his prison term.
Under the terms described by WLKY, Mansilla-Torrez must register as a sex offender for life, and the report said the convictions cannot be expunged. Those requirements affect long-term public safety practices, including community notification and restrictions that can apply to convicted sex offenders in Kentucky.
No further trial date or separate proceedings were described in the WLKY account, but the sentencing terms establish the next phase for the case: incarceration under the Department of Corrections, followed by supervised release and lifetime registration obligations. The WLKY report did not describe any appeal or challenges to the sentence at the time of publication.
Why It Matters
- The sentence keeps a defendant convicted of sexual crimes against minors confined for a lengthy period and limits early release options through parole eligibility requirements and probation restrictions described in the court-related reporting.
- The case includes lifetime sex offender registration and non-expungement language, which can affect community safety processes for years after release.
- For victims and families, the outcome establishes accountability through multiple convictions and custody time tied to several separate categories of offenses.
- The Department of Corrections treatment requirement and post-incarceration supervision provisions outlined in the reporting are concrete steps in how Kentucky addresses recidivism risk and monitoring after incarceration.
Sources
Key Facts
- Eduardo Mansilla-Torrez, a Louisville man, pleaded guilty in Jefferson County and was sentenced on the same day, according to WLKY.
- The total sentence was 20 years in prison, WLKY reported.
- The plea and sentence included convictions for two counts of rape and two counts of sodomy, plus five counts of wanton endangerment and other counts including distribution of obscene matter to minors and indecent exposure.
- WLKY reported Mansilla-Torrez is not eligible for probation or shock probation on the first four counts because they are classified as violent offenses.
- The report said he must serve at least 85% of the sentence on the violent counts before becoming eligible for parole consideration.
- WLKY said he must complete sex offender treatment through the Kentucky Department of Corrections, will have five years of post-incarceration supervision, and must register as a sex offender for life with convictions that cannot be expunged.