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Man gets life in prison for 1996 cold-case murder, rape of 18-year-old Angie Dodge in Idaho Falls

Brian Leigh Dripps Sr. glances over to members of the Dodge family as he makes a statement during his sentencing in Idaho Falls, Idaho on Tuesday, June 8, 2021.(Monte LaOrange/Post Register via AP)

Eighteen-year-old Angie Dodge was raped and killed in her Idaho home a quarter-century ago and an innocent man wrongly served 20 years in prison for the crime. On Tuesday, the man authorities have said is the real killer was sentenced to life in prison.

Brian Leigh Dripps Sr., 55, must serve at least 20 years in prison before he will be eligible for parole, 7th District Judge Joel Tingey said.


Dripps’ defense attorneys say his medical problems — including a history of heart issues and an autoimmune disease — makes it unlikely that he will live long enough to get parole.

“Twenty-five years is a long time to wait for some type of closure on such a brutal crime,” Tingey said. “ … It’s impossible to quantify how much damage has been caused, and it’s spread wide.”

Angie Dodge had just moved into her own apartment in Idaho Falls in 1996 when she was killed. Prosecutors said Dodge was asleep when Dripps entered her apartment and that he raped her and cut her throat so severely that she was nearly decapitated.

Immediately after the killing, investigators zeroed in on another suspect — Christopher Tapp.

Officers with the Idaho Falls Police Department repeatedly questioned him for hours, feeding him details of the case and telling him he could face the death penalty unless he implicated himself and another suspect. Tapp eventually wrongfully confessed to the crime, though he later professed his innocence, and was convicted.

But Tapp had the support of both the advocacy group the Innocence Project and Dodge’s mother, Carol Dodge.

DNA evidence collected from the crime scene wasn’t tested until 2016 and it showed that Tapp’s genetic material wasn’t present in the sample. He was released in 2017 after reaching a deal in which his murder sentence was reduced to time served and the rape conviction was vacated.

Meanwhile, investigators periodically worked the cold case, hoping to uncover what really happened the night Dodge was killed.

They began using DNA databases to try to find a suspect or someone likely to be related to the person who left the DNA.

After a few dead ends, in 2019 they discovered a possible suspect who had lived in Idaho Falls at the time of the murder and was now living across the state in Caldwell — Brian Dripps Sr.

Law enforcement officers tailed Dripps and scooped up a cigarette butt he’d thrown from a car window. It had enough DNA present to show it matched the sample left at the crime scene back in 1996.

When confronted by police, Dripps confessed, saying he was high on cocaine and alcohol and had planned to rape Dodge, not murder her. He claimed he did not remember cutting Dodge’s throat. But he did not deny it.

Dripps’ confession led to Tapp being formally exonerated of the crimes.

“A young man spent a significant portion of his life in prison for no good reason. He was innocent. That falls on you,” the judge told Dripps during the sentencing hearing.

Angie Dodge’s brother, Todd Dodge, told the court that Dripps “dropped an atomic bomb in the center of our family and our community” and spoke of the guilt and frustration that he, jurors and others involved in the original trial against Tapp felt after learning Tapp was innocent.

“He sentenced me to a lifetime of hell — so far I have served 9,126 days,” Todd Dodge said of Dripps.

Another brother, Roger Dodge, said Angie Dodge’s murder is the most devastating thing he’s ever experienced.

Dripps also spoke, offering an apology.

“I am sorry. I didn’t intend for this to happen,” he said. “Wish we could have a chance at a do-over because I would do over that day … I know you’ll never forgive me but I am sorry.”