A California will not be menacing innocent women anymore after a judge handed down an 107-year, eight-month sentence for his involvement in a horrific four-hour, two-city crime spree four years ago.

Ulises Omar De La Torre, 36, was finally found guilty at a Santa Ana court and sent to a state prison after he attacked five-women in Garden Grove and Anaheim on January 16, 2014.

He was captured two days later after cops where tipped off by footage from a surveillance video camera.

Ulises Omar De La Torre, 36, (pictured) was sentenced to 107 years in jail after he sexually assaulted five women in January 2014 during a four-hour spree in two different cities in California. Police officials were alerted to a video image and De La Torre was caught two days after the attacks.

Authorities were able to get a good description of Ulises Omar De La Torre, who on January 16, 2014 sexually assaulted five women in two different cities in California. He was finally arrested two days later.

De La Torre will also have to register as a lifetime sexual offender.

The first of the five evening attacks within a two-mile radius occurred at about 5:15PM when De La Torre tried to engage his victim in a conversation as she was walking home from work.

She rebuffed his advances before he hit the woman in the head several times and tried to pull down her pants.

He then tried kidnapping the woman but her brave fight and continuous screams forced him to flee.

The lifelong criminal, who previously was convicted for attempted murder and street terrorism, then illegally entered another woman's home before she arrived at 7:15PM.

He then grabbed and stabbed her in the back and in the arm.

But as soon as her boyfriend arrived at the home, he somehow was able to flee the scene.

In a court testimony, one of the victims, a college student, mentioned how much she struggled during the course of the first couple of months after the attack.

'The first months after the attack were the most difficult. I had problems with my appearance,' she recalled. 'It was very difficult to walk on campus with people constantly looking at me due to the bruises, the swelling and the stitches.'

“You see it wasn’t just me you attacked that evening with your angry blows to my head and arms with your knife,,' another victim said in court. 'You attacked my entire family, my heart, my soul and my reason for everything.'

Ulises Omar De La Torre , who got an 107-year sentenced for sexually assaulting five women in January 2014, had also been convicted of attempted murder and street terrorism.

In a court testimony, one of the victims, a college student, mentioned how much she struggled during the course of the first couple of months after the attack.

'The first months after the attack were the most difficult. I had problems with my appearance,' she recalled. 'It was very difficult to walk on campus with people constantly looking at me due to the bruises, the swelling and the stitches.'

“You see it wasn’t just me you attacked that evening with your angry blows to my head and arms with your knife,,' another victim said in court. 'You attacked my entire family, my heart, my soul and my reason for everything.'

De La Torre struck once again, at about 7:50PM, this time in Anaheim, when he tried entering the room of two women as they opened the door to their hotel room.

The Anaheim Police Department's police report noted that De La Torre pulled out a knife and slashed both of them in the 'head, face and arms' and tried murdering one of the women.

But again he was able to escape the scene without being caught.

A woman enjoying her night jogging session at 9:00PM unexpectedly got punched multiple times by De La Torre. He knocked her to the floor and assaulted her non-stop while 'pulling at her clothes' and then sped off.

He was found guilty of attempted murder, kidnapping to commit a sex offense, two counts of torture, two counts of assault with the intent to commit a sexual offense, assault with the intent to commit a sexual offense in the commission of first degree burglary, first degree burglary and assault.