S.F. sex offender gets 373 years to life

(12-14) 17:19 PST SAN FRANCISCO -- A San Francisco school cafeteria worker was sentenced Friday to 373 years to life in prison for sexually assaulting three women last year in the Mission District, crimes the sentencing judge described as "heinous" and "barbaric."

Frederick Dozier Jr., 33, was convicted last month on 25 felony counts, including attempted rape, kidnapping and forced oral copulation.

As she handed down the sentence, Superior Court Judge Anne-Christine Massullo described each of the attacks on the three petite women near the 24th Street corridor, repeating the same rebuke to Dozier with each account: "She never had a chance to get away."

Massullo explained how the first victim, a woman in her 20s, was almost half the size of Dozier, who dragged her to a driveway on the 1300 block of South Van Ness Avenue on June 17, 2011, at 3 a.m.

He forced her to perform sex acts, cutting up her knees and hands, and then blamed the attack on drugs, Massullo said.

The judge noted that the second victim, a woman in her 50s, was choked so hard the blood vessels in her eyes burst during that early morning attack on Potrero Avenue on Nov. 18, 2011.

By the third victim, Massullo said, the attacks had grown progressively more violent. The third victim, a woman in her 30s, was grabbed from behind near Fair Oaks and 24th streets at about 4 a.m. on Dec. 8, 2011.

The judge said when the third victim came to after Dozier choked her to unconsciousness, her face was covered in blood and her nose was split to the cartilage. Dozier put his face up to hers and she said she thought she was going to die.

"There is no remorse, no contrition," Massullo said of Dozier.

As through most of the two-week trial, Dozier remained calm and quiet during the most of the proceedings. As he was being led away, he turned toward his family members in the gallery.

"See ya," he said.