24-Year-Old Arrested in Alleged Sexual Assault of Park City High School Student
Park City police arrested 24-year-old Conrrado Ahuexoteco Atrisco and booked him March 4 on suspicion of second-degree forcible sexual abuse after a 14-year-old Park City High School student reported an assault to a school resource officer.

Summit County deputies arrested Conrrado Ahuexoteco Atrisco, 24, and booked him into the Summit County jail March 4 on suspicion of second-degree forcible sexual abuse and providing false information to a peace officer, documents show. Court and detention records show Atrisco is being held without bail, and officers cited concerns about community safety and a possible flight risk without legal status in the United States.
According to the probable cause affidavit, a 14-year-old Park City High School student reported the incident to a school resource officer on Feb. 25. The student told investigators she had been at a friend’s house near Park City High School watching TikTok videos when her friend’s 24-year-old ex-boyfriend came over, got on the bed with her, began hugging her and trying to cuddle, and then “pulled her sweatpants down and began to sexually assault her,” the affidavit states.
The student was taken to the hospital and a CodeR exam was performed, the affidavit and hospital referral records indicate. Medical personnel observed scratches on her body, and police interviewed the teen the next day at the Summit County Children’s Justice Center, according to police documents.
Investigators located Atrisco outside an apartment complex on March 4 after using a social media account connected to him, police reports show. Summit County documents say he initially lied to officers about his identity and where he lived. Before his arrest, “he told police he was aware of rumors about the assault and that they were not true,” the affidavit records. Booking records list the alleged offenses as a second-degree felony for forcible sexual abuse and a class B misdemeanor for providing false information to a peace officer.
There is a discrepancy in reporting about formal court action. KPCW reported that “no formal charges had been filed as of March 6,” while booking paperwork filed March 4 lists the suspicions that led to his detention. A separate note in local reporting said a border security reporter highlighted a lack of transparency from the Summit County Sheriff’s Office about Atrisco’s immigration status amid public inquiries; Summit County documents in the file cite officer concerns about flight risk tied to lacking legal status, but no independent confirmation of immigration status is included in the records reviewed.
Legal protocols and privacy protections for minors limit what investigators and the district attorney will release about the victim and forensic records. “Charges are allegations only. All arrested persons are presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt,” the advisory on the case states. As of the most recent public records, whether prosecutors will file formal charges and set an arraignment date remains to be reflected in the Summit County court docket after March 6.
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